What Is a Family Trust?
There are three parties in a family trust: a grantor, a trustee and the beneficiaries.
The grantor makes the trust and transfers their assets into it. The trustee manages the assets in the trust on behalf of the beneficiaries, who receive some type of financial benefit from the trust.
A family trust lists your family members as the beneficiaries, and can also include spouses.
Family trusts are a type of living trust that takes effect during your lifetime, and can be revocable or irrevocable.
Revocable trusts can be altered or terminated at any time, while irrevocable trusts are permanent.
With a revocable family trust, you can act as your own trustee, naming successor trustees to take over if you become incapacitated or pass away. With an irrevocable trust, you must name someone else to act as the trustee.