Revocable trusts give you flexibility and control — you can change them anytime. Irrevocable trusts are permanent but offer asset protection and tax benefits. For most people, a revocable trust is the right choice. Understanding how each trust type fits into your broader estate plan will help you protect your assets, avoid probate, and plan for the people who depend on you.
Quick Comparison: Revocable vs Irrevocable Trust
| Feature | Revocable Trust | Irrevocable Trust |
|---|---|---|
| Can you change it? | ✓ Anytime | ✗ Permanent |
| Do you control assets? | ✓ Full control | ✗ Trustee controls |
| Avoids probate? | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes |
| Asset protection? | ✗ No | ✓ Yes |
| Protected from lawsuits? | ✗ No | ✓ Yes (usually) |
| Medicaid planning? | ✗ No | ✓ Yes (5-year lookback) |
| Reduces estate tax? | ✗ No | ✓ Yes |
| Income tax benefit? | ✗ No | Sometimes |
| Maintains privacy? | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes |
| Best for | Most people | Asset protection, tax planning, Medicaid |
Both trust types avoid probate and maintain privacy, but the trade-offs around control, taxes, and protection are significant. Before choosing, review the full list of estate planning documents you’ll need alongside a trust to make sure nothing falls through the cracks.
Revocable Trust (Revocable Living Trust)
A revocable living trust is the foundation of most modern estate plans. It lets you manage your assets during your lifetime, provides a seamless handoff if you become incapacitated, and ensures your heirs receive their inheritance without going through probate court. Our living trust guide walks through the setup process in detail.
How It Works
- You create the trust and name yourself as trustee (manager)
- You transfer assets into the trust
- You maintain full control — can add, remove, or change anything
- You name a successor trustee (who takes over when you die or become incapacitated)
- Trust becomes irrevocable when you die
- Assets pass to beneficiaries without probate
Key point: You can undo it anytime. It’s like a box you put assets in, but you keep the key and can take them out whenever you want.
What It Does
| Benefit | How It Works |
|---|---|
| Avoids probate | Assets transfer immediately to heirs |
| Privacy | Not part of public court records |
| Incapacity planning | Successor trustee manages if you can’t |
| Multi-state property | One probate-free mechanism for property in multiple states |
| Smooth transition | No court delays, heirs access assets quickly |
| Control after death | Can specify age limitations (kids get assets at 25, not 18) |
What It DOESN’T Do
| Non-Benefit | Why |
|---|---|
| ❌ Asset protection | Creditors can still reach assets |
| ❌ Lawsuit protection | Assets still considered yours |
| ❌ Medicaid eligibility | Assets count toward Medicaid limits |
| ❌ Estate tax reduction | Assets still in your taxable estate |
| ❌ Income tax savings | You still pay income tax on trust income |
Bottom line: Revocable trusts are about probate avoidance and convenience, not protection or tax savings. If you’re primarily concerned with how tax brackets work or reducing your estate tax liability by state, you’ll need to look at irrevocable structures instead.
Who Needs a Revocable Trust
| Situation | Benefit |
|---|---|
| Own real estate | Avoid probate delays and costs |
| Own property in multiple states | Avoid probate in each state |
| Value privacy | Keep estate matters private |
| Concerned about incapacity | Successor trustee takes over seamlessly |
| Want control over distribution | Set age limits, conditions, staggered distributions |
| Have blended family | More control than will alone |
| Net worth over $200k | Probate costs become significant |
If you’re unsure where your estate plan stands, the estate planning checklist by age breaks down exactly what you need at each life stage.
Cost to Create
| Method | Cost | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Online service (Trust & Will, LegalZoom) | $300–$600 | Simple estates |
| Estate attorney | $1,500–$3,000 (single) | Most homeowners |
| Estate attorney | $2,500–$5,000 (married couple) | Most married couples |
| Complex estate | $5,000–$10,000+ | Business owners, high net worth |
Example: How a Revocable Trust Works
Scenario: John and Mary own a home worth $400,000 and have $300,000 in retirement accounts.
- They create a revocable living trust and name themselves as co-trustees
- They deed the house into the trust: “John and Mary Smith, Trustees of the Smith Family Trust”
- They continue living in the home, paying taxes, refinancing if needed — nothing changes day-to-day
- They name their daughter Sarah as successor trustee
- When John dies, Mary continues as sole trustee. No probate. No delays.
- When Mary dies, Sarah becomes trustee and distributes assets per the trust terms. No probate. No court.
- The house transfers to their kids in weeks, not months/years.
Note: The $300k in retirement accounts should NOT go into the trust — use beneficiary designations instead.
Irrevocable Trust
An irrevocable trust is a more powerful but less flexible tool. Once you transfer assets into it, they are no longer legally yours — which is exactly why they gain protection from creditors, lawsuits, Medicaid spend-down rules, and estate taxes. If you’re exploring whether your estate is large enough to benefit, review the current federal income tax brackets and inheritance tax rules.
How It Works
- You create the trust and transfer assets permanently into it
- You name a separate trustee (not yourself) to manage it
- You give up control — can’t change terms or take assets back
- Assets are no longer legally yours
- Trustee manages assets according to trust document
- Beneficiaries receive distributions per trust terms
Key point: Once done, it’s done. You can’t undo it (with very rare exceptions requiring court approval and beneficiary consent).
What It Does
| Benefit | How It Works |
|---|---|
| Asset protection | Creditors can’t reach trust assets (usually) |
| Medicaid planning | Assets don’t count after 5-year lookback |
| Estate tax reduction | Removes assets from taxable estate |
| Lawsuit protection | Assets protected from malpractice, personal injury claims |
| Divorce protection | Assets protected from ex-spouse claims |
| Life insurance planning | ILIT removes life insurance from estate |
| Special needs planning | Preserve government benefits for disabled beneficiary |
| Spendthrift protection | Protects beneficiaries from their own creditors |
Types of Irrevocable Trusts
| Trust Type | Purpose | Common Use |
|---|---|---|
| Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust (ILIT) | Remove life insurance from taxable estate | Estates over $13.99M |
| Medicaid Asset Protection Trust (MAPT) | Qualify for Medicaid long-term care | Nursing home planning (5-year lookback) |
| Special Needs Trust (SNT) | Support disabled person without losing government benefits | SSI/Medicaid recipients |
| Charitable Remainder Trust (CRT) | Income for life, remainder to charity, tax deduction | High-income earners wanting charitable deduction |
| Grantor Retained Annuity Trust (GRAT) | Transfer appreciating assets with minimal gift tax | High net worth, appreciating assets |
| Qualified Personal Residence Trust (QPRT) | Transfer home with reduced gift tax | High net worth homeowners |
| Spendthrift Trust | Protect beneficiaries from their creditors | Concerned about heir’s financial judgment |
Each trust type serves a specific purpose. If you’re weighing whether life insurance proceeds push your estate over the federal exemption, an ILIT may be the right answer. If long-term care costs are your primary concern, a MAPT might be more relevant.
Who Needs an Irrevocable Trust
| Situation | Which Irrevocable Trust |
|---|---|
| Estate over $13.99M (single) or $27.98M (married) | ILIT, GRAT, or charitable trusts |
| Expect to need Medicaid nursing home care | Medicaid Asset Protection Trust |
| Have disabled child receiving government benefits | Special Needs Trust |
| High risk of lawsuits (doctor, business owner) | Domestic Asset Protection Trust |
| Want to make large charitable donation | Charitable Remainder Trust |
| Own life insurance policy over $1M + large estate | ILIT |
For most people making under $200k/year with estates under $10M, an irrevocable trust is not necessary.
Cost to Create
| Trust Type | Cost Range |
|---|---|
| Simple irrevocable trust | $2,000–$5,000 |
| ILIT | $3,000–$6,000 |
| Medicaid trust | $3,000–$7,000 |
| Special Needs Trust | $3,000–$8,000 |
| Charitable Remainder Trust | $5,000–$10,000 |
| GRAT / QPRT | $5,000–$15,000+ |
Plus annual maintenance: trust tax returns ($500–$2,000/year), trustee fees, and potential accounting costs.
Example: How an Irrevocable Trust Works
Scenario: Dr. Johnson, age 55, is a surgeon with malpractice liability concerns. He has $2M in savings.
- He creates an irrevocable trust and transfers $1.5M into it
- He names his brother as trustee (cannot be himself)
- The trust is structured to provide income to him and his wife for life
- After they die, remaining assets go to their children
- He can’t change his mind — the $1.5M is no longer his
- If he’s sued for malpractice, that $1.5M is protected (subject to fraudulent transfer rules)
- The $1.5M is also removed from his taxable estate (only matters if estate exceeds $13.99M)
Trade-off: He protected $1.5M but gave up direct control. Can’t take it back if he needs it (though trust can be structured to provide income).
Side-by-Side Comparison
Control and Flexibility
| Feature | Revocable | Irrevocable |
|---|---|---|
| Change terms | ✓ Anytime | ✗ Permanent |
| Add assets | ✓ Yes | ✗ No (usually) |
| Remove assets | ✓ Yes | ✗ No |
| Dissolve trust | ✓ Yes | ✗ No |
| You can be trustee | ✓ Yes | ✗ No |
| Access to assets | ✓ Full | ✗ Limited |
Winner: Revocable (maximum flexibility)
Asset Protection
| Protection From | Revocable | Irrevocable |
|---|---|---|
| Your creditors | ✗ No | ✓ Yes* |
| Lawsuits against you | ✗ No | ✓ Yes* |
| Medicaid spend-down | ✗ No | ✓ Yes (after 5 years) |
| Beneficiary’s creditors | ✓ Yes (spendthrift clause) | ✓ Yes |
| Divorce (beneficiary’s spouse) | ✓ Yes (proper drafting) | ✓ Yes |
*Except for fraudulent transfers (moving assets to avoid known creditors)
Winner: Irrevocable (strong asset protection)
Probate and Privacy
| Feature | Revocable | Irrevocable |
|---|---|---|
| Avoids probate | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes |
| Keeps estate private | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes |
| Speeds up distribution | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes |
| Multi-state property | ✓ One trust | ✓ One trust |
Winner: Tie (both avoid probate)
Taxes
| Tax Issue | Revocable | Irrevocable |
|---|---|---|
| Your taxable estate | Assets included | Assets removed |
| Income tax | You pay (grantor trust) | Trust pays OR you pay (depends on structure) |
| Tax ID needed | ✗ Use your SSN | ✓ Separate EIN required |
| Trust tax return | ✗ No | ✓ Yes (Form 1041) |
| Estate tax benefit | ✗ No | ✓ Yes (if over $13.99M) |
| Step-up in basis | ✓ Yes | ✗ No (usually) |
Winner: Revocable (for most people with estates under $13.99M)
Winner: Irrevocable (for high net worth estates over $13.99M)
The step-up in basis is particularly important for assets with large capital gains. With a revocable trust, heirs receive a stepped-up cost basis at death, which can eliminate decades of unrealized gains. Irrevocable trusts generally do not receive this benefit, so weigh that against the capital gains tax on real estate you might owe.
Cost and Complexity
| Factor | Revocable | Irrevocable |
|---|---|---|
| Setup cost | $1,500–$3,000 | $3,000–$15,000 |
| Annual maintenance | Minimal | $500–$5,000/year |
| Complexity | Moderate | High |
| Ongoing admin | Low | High |
| Tax returns | No | Yes |
| Need attorney | Optional (can use online) | Yes (required) |
Winner: Revocable (cheaper, simpler)
Common Misconceptions
Myth 1: “Revocable trusts save estate taxes”
FALSE. Revocable trusts do NOT reduce estate tax. Assets in a revocable trust are still part of your taxable estate because you maintain control.
Only irrevocable trusts (where you give up control) remove assets from your estate.
However: Estate tax only applies to estates over $13.99M (2026) — so 99.5% of Americans don’t pay it anyway.
Myth 2: “Revocable trusts protect assets from lawsuits”
FALSE. Because you control a revocable trust, creditors can reach assets in it. It provides zero asset protection during your lifetime.
Only irrevocable trusts (where you give up control) provide asset protection.
Myth 3: “Once you create an irrevocable trust, you can never access the money”
DEPENDS. Irrevocable trusts can be structured to:
- Pay you income for life
- Make discretionary distributions for your benefit (via independent trustee)
- Reimburse certain expenses
But you cannot directly control or take back principal. The trust document dictates what’s allowed.
Myth 4: “You need an attorney to create a revocable trust”
FALSE (for simple situations). Online services like Trust & Will or LegalZoom can create valid revocable trusts starting at $300–$600.
However: You SHOULD use an attorney if:
- Estate over $1M
- Blended family
- Business ownership
- Minor children with special needs
- Multiple properties
- Want tax planning
Myth 5: “Irrevocable trusts are only for the super-wealthy”
FALSE. While the wealthy use them for estate tax planning, average-income people use irrevocable trusts for:
- Medicaid planning (nursing home costs)
- Special needs planning (disabled children)
- Asset protection (high-liability professions)
People with average retirement savings may still benefit from a Medicaid Asset Protection Trust if long-term care insurance isn’t affordable.
When to Use Each Type
Choose a Revocable Trust If:
✅ You want to avoid probate
✅ You own real estate (especially in multiple states)
✅ You value privacy
✅ You want incapacity planning (complementing your power of attorney and advance directives)
✅ You want to maintain full control
✅ Your estate is under $10M
✅ You’re not concerned about lawsuits or Medicaid
✅ You want flexibility to change your mind
Best for: 90% of people doing estate planning
Choose an Irrevocable Trust If:
✅ Your estate exceeds $13.99M (single) or $27.98M (married) — estate tax planning
✅ You expect to need nursing home care in 5+ years — Medicaid planning
✅ You have a special needs child receiving government benefits — preserve eligibility
✅ You’re in a high-liability profession (doctor, lawyer, business owner) — asset protection
✅ You have a life insurance policy over $1M + large estate — ILIT to remove from estate
✅ You want to make a large charitable donation — CRT for tax deduction
✅ You’re willing to give up control for protection or tax benefits
Best for: Specific situations requiring asset protection, Medicaid planning, or estate tax reduction
Can You Have Both?
Yes. Many estate plans include:
- Revocable trust for the bulk of assets (probate avoidance)
- Irrevocable life insurance trust to hold life insurance policy (remove death benefit from estate)
- Special needs trust for disabled child (preserve government benefits)
Revocable Trust Becomes Irrevocable at Death
Important: All revocable trusts automatically become irrevocable when you die. This is a key reason to choose your beneficiary designations and successor trustee carefully up front.
| While You’re Alive | After You Die |
|---|---|
| Trust is revocable | Trust becomes irrevocable |
| You’re the trustee | Successor trustee takes over |
| You can change anything | Terms are locked in |
| Assets are still “yours” | Assets belong to beneficiaries (but held in trust) |
| You file taxes on your return | Trust may file its own return (if structured as complex trust) |
This is why you need to carefully choose:
- Successor trustee — who will manage the trust
- Distribution terms — how and when beneficiaries receive assets
- Contingencies — what happens if beneficiary dies or has special circumstances
If you have minor children, also consider naming a guardian in your will — a trust cannot appoint a guardian, only a will can.
Converting Revocable to Irrevocable
Can You Convert?
- Automatic conversion: When you die, your revocable trust becomes irrevocable
- Voluntary conversion: You can voluntarily make your trust irrevocable while alive, but this is rare and irreversible
Why Would You Convert?
- Medicaid eligibility (5-year lookback)
- Asset protection after transferring wealth to next generation
- Locking in estate plan to prevent changes if you develop dementia
Important: Once converted, you cannot change it back. This is a one-way door.
Special Situations
Married Couples
Most married couples use a revocable living trust with special provisions:
| Feature | How It Works |
|---|---|
| Joint trust | Both spouses as co-trustees, full access to all assets |
| First death | Surviving spouse continues as sole trustee, full control |
| Second death | Successor trustee distributes to beneficiaries |
| Credit shelter trust (if estate over $13.99M) | At first death, split into A/B trusts to maximize estate tax exemptions |
Blended Families
Irrevocable trusts can be helpful for blended families:
- Provide for current spouse during their lifetime
- Ensure assets ultimately go to your children (not spouse’s new partner)
- Prevent disputes over inheritance
QTIP trust (Qualified Terminable Interest Property) is common:
- Current spouse receives income for life
- After spouse dies, assets go to your children
- Spouse can’t change beneficiaries or take principal
Special Needs Planning
Special Needs Trust (SNT) is irrevocable:
- Provides for disabled person without disqualifying from SSI/Medicaid
- Third-party trustee manages funds
- Distributions supplement (not replace) government benefits
- Pays for extras: therapy, equipment, vacations, personal care
Funding the Trust (Critical Step)
Creating a trust is only half the job. You must transfer assets into it (called “funding”). This is the step most people skip, and it’s the reason many trusts fail to accomplish their purpose. See our living trust guide for a detailed funding walkthrough.
What Goes in Revocable Trust
| Asset | How to Transfer |
|---|---|
| Real estate | Record new deed with trust as owner |
| Bank accounts | Re-title or add POD designation |
| Brokerage accounts | Re-title or add TOD designation |
| Business interests | Assignment of interest to trust |
| Personal property | Bill of sale or schedule of assets |
What DOESN’T Go in Trust
| Asset | Use This Instead |
|---|---|
| Retirement accounts (IRA, 401k) | Beneficiary designation |
| Life insurance | Beneficiary designation OR ILIT if large estate |
| HSA | Beneficiary designation |
| Vehicles | TOD title (simpler than trust) |
Most common mistake: Creating trust but forgetting to fund it. A trust only works for assets it holds.
Retirement accounts like IRAs and 401(k)s should never be placed directly into a trust — doing so triggers a full taxable distribution. Instead, update your beneficiary designations and, if you’re over 73, make sure you understand the required minimum distribution (RMD) rules.
Bottom Line: Which Should You Choose?
For most people: Revocable trust
If you’re a homeowner with a relatively simple estate under $10M, a revocable living trust is the right choice. You’ll:
- Avoid probate
- Maintain full control
- Get incapacity protection
- Keep privacy
- Have flexibility to change your mind
Cost: $1,500–$3,000 (or $300–$600 with online service)
When to add an irrevocable trust:
Only if you have specific needs:
- Estate over $13.99M → add ILIT for life insurance
- Facing nursing home care in 5+ years → add Medicaid trust (review long-term care insurance first)
- Special needs child on government benefits → add Special Needs Trust
- High liability profession + substantial assets → add Domestic Asset Protection Trust
- Large charitable intent → add Charitable Remainder Trust
Don’t overcomplicate it. Start with a revocable trust for probate avoidance. Add irrevocable trusts only if you have specific asset protection, Medicaid, or estate tax concerns.
Most important: Actually fund the trust. Transfer your assets into it. A beautiful trust document sitting in a drawer does nothing if your assets aren’t in it.
Related Resources
- Living Trust Guide — step-by-step setup and funding
- Estate Planning Documents Checklist — the six documents every adult needs
- Estate Planning by Age — what to do at 25, 35, 45, 55, and beyond
- Probate Guide — what happens without a trust
- How to Write a Will — wills vs trusts and when you need both
- Power of Attorney Guide — incapacity planning alongside your trust
- Beneficiary Designation Guide — coordinate designations with trust
- Inheritance Tax Calculator — estimate state-level inheritance taxes
- Estate Tax by State — which states have their own estate tax
- Digital Estate Planning — protecting online accounts and digital assets
The content on Wealthvieu is for informational purposes only and should not be considered financial, tax, or investment advice. Consult a qualified professional before making financial decisions. Full disclaimer · Editorial policy