Benefits of a Lifetime Trust for Children’s Inheritance

James Johnstone, JD, MBA

Sr. Estate Planning Strategist

Summary

Discover how a lifetime trust can protect your children’s inheritance, avoids probate, and offers tax advantages. Learn why this estate planning strategy helps ensure long-term security and reassurance.

A family discussing a lifetime trust

When designing a revocable living trust, one of the most important structural decisions is how and when a child’s share will be distributed after the parent’s death. Many families default to outright distributions at a target age such as 25, 30, or 35. They might believe that once a child is an adult, the protective shell of a trust is no longer needed. 

Yet, experience shows that the lifetime trust approach can offer protection and flexibility. It also provides an opportunity for thoughtful, values-based management and preservation of wealth. 

What is a lifetime trust? 

A lifetime trust is simply a trust that continues for the child’s lifetime rather than terminating and distributing assets outright at a specified age. Instead of receiving their inheritance in full, the child benefits from the trust during their life. The assets remain protected within the trust structure and can pass to future generations at the child’s death. 

This children’s inheritance trust approach preserves flexibility, promotes responsibility, and safeguards family wealth long after the initial transfer. 

Breaking down 6 key benefits 

1. Continuous asset protection
A lifetime trust can provide protection in the following situations and throughout the beneficiary’s life: 

  • Divorce protection: Assets held in the trust remain separate property, generally excluded from marital division. 
  • Creditor protection: A thoughtfully drafted “spendthrift provision”, combined with an ascertainable standard for distributions, generally protects trust assets from most creditor claims.  
  • Business and liability protection: Trust assets generally remain insulated from bankruptcy, failed business ventures, and personal guarantees. 

 An outright distribution at age 30 provides none of these safeguards. With a lifetime trust, the child enjoys financial benefits without personal exposure, preserving the trust for future generations. 

 2. Tax efficiency and generational planning

With the proper structure, it’s possible to achieve tax benefits of lifetime trusts as well as incorporate legacy planning strategies: 

  • Estate and Generation Skipping Transfer (GST) tax efficiency: The Generation Skipping Transfer tax is a federal tax that can apply when wealth passes to grandchildren or later generations. For many families, a well- structured trust for a child can help to reduce the impact of estate tax and GST tax on the assets and future appreciation. The child’s inheritance can become what is commonly thought of as a dynasty trust, one that benefits multiple generations without being reduced by transfer taxes at each generation. 
  • Income tax flexibility: The trustee can distribute income to beneficiaries in lower tax brackets or keep it when it’s more efficient, adjusting each year as circumstances change. 

The goal is multigenerational preservation of capital and tax efficient compounding of family wealth.

3. Flexibility and control for the child

A lifetime trust can be drafted to give the beneficiary meaningful control while maintaining legal protection: 

  • After reaching a certain age, the child can be the only trustee or a co-trustee. The trustee will have the power to make investment choices and decide on distributions for health, education, maintenance, and support. 
  • The trust can be designed to provide the child a limited power of appointment. This allows the child to redirect assets among descendants or charities, effectively updating the plan for future generations. 
  • It is important to note that the more flexibility the trust provides, particularly if the beneficiary serves as sole trustee, the weaker the protection it provides. An independent trustee can remain in place, perhaps as a co-trustee with the child, to enhance the trust’s protective nature while ensuring professional oversight. 

This structure creates a balance between independence and discipline. The child manages wealth as an adult, but within a framework designed to protect the family legacy for generations.

4. Encouraging productivity: Income matching and incentive provisions

Parents often worry that inherited wealth might discourage ambition or responsibility. The lifetime trust structure allows creative provisions that promote productivity while maintaining protection. 

Examples include: 

  • Income matching formulas: The trustee may distribute trust income in an amount equal to, or as a multiple of, the beneficiary’s earned income. For instance, the trust could distribute one dollar for every dollar the child earns, up to a defined cap each year. 
  • Careerbased incentives: Funds may be used for education, training, or business investments that help the child become independent. 
  • Trustee discretion based on behavior: The trustee can reward good financial habits, home ownership, or steady jobs. They can also limit distributions if there is substance abuse, bankruptcy, or dependency. 

While these incentive-style provisions can align the trust with the family’s values, they can also create unintended consequences. For example, if a child becomes entitled to a distribution based on one of these criteria and later faces a creditor claim, that entitlement could make the funds vulnerable to being used to satisfy the creditor. 

Often, the best approach is the simpler one: allowing the trustee to make distributions for the beneficiary’s health, education, maintenance, and support. At the same time, including language encouraging the child to be a productive member of society. This approach places greater emphasis on trustee selection, but it offers more flexibility, stronger protection, and avoids the rigidity of incentive formulas.

5. Family continuity and stewardship

A lifetime trust is not merely a tax or asset protection tool. It is a framework for responsible wealth management and family continuity. 

It makes sure that wealth supports long-term family goals. These goals may include responsible management, education, and giving to others. This way, each generation can benefit from the planning of the previous one.

6. Administrative simplicity and built-in flexibility

A lifetime trust can be incorporated directly within a parent’s revocable trust. This means no extra documents or court actions are needed at death. The parent’s passing automatically creates each child’s trust, helping ensure seamless administration. 

If the family later decides that the structure is no longer necessary, the trust can permit termination under specific circumstances. For example, with the consent of an independent trustee or if the balance falls below a practical threshold. 

Considering a lifetime trust 

The lifetime trust approach transforms an inheritance into a durable planning vehicle that protects assets, promotes responsibility, and perpetuates family values. It provides children with opportunities to understand the value of wealth, encourages them to be productive, maintains flexibility, and prepares them for potential future risks.  

For many families, this approach represents the ideal balance between freedom and inheritance planning. It helps ensure that wealth is a source of opportunity, not a risk, for future generations. 

If you want to know more about choosing the right type of trusts for your family or integrating an estate plan with your financial plan, let’s talk. 

All expressions of opinion reflect the judgment of the author as of the date of publication and are subject to change. Some of the research and ratings shown in this presentation come from third parties that are not affiliated with Mercer Advisors. The information is believed to be accurate but is not guaranteed or warranted by Mercer Advisors. Content, research, tools and stock or option symbols are for educational and illustrative purposes only and do not imply a recommendation or solicitation to buy or sell a particular security or to engage in any particular investment strategy.

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