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A revocable living trust lets your family skip probate entirely — transferring assets privately, quickly, and without court involvement.
Schedule a Free ConsultationAuthorized under N.C.G.S. Chapter 36C (the NC Uniform Trust Code) and S.C. Code §§ 62-7-101 et seq. (the SC Uniform Trust Code), a revocable living trust is a legal arrangement where you transfer ownership of your assets to a trust you control during your lifetime — and that distributes those assets to your chosen beneficiaries after death without going through probate court. You serve as your own trustee while alive and competent, retaining complete control. At incapacity or death, the successor trustee you named steps in immediately, with no waiting period and no court filing. For NC homeowners, a funded trust avoids the Clerk of Superior Court’s 40¢-per-$100 probate fee (capped at $6,000 under N.C.G.S. § 7A-307) and the typical 6–12 month administration timeline; for clients with real estate in both Carolinas, it also avoids a second ancillary probate in the other state.
The core advantage of a revocable trust over a will is that probate is avoided entirely for assets held in the trust. Probate in North Carolina and South Carolina typically takes 12–18 months, involves filing deadlines, creditor publication requirements, and court supervision — all of it public record. A trust-based estate plan bypasses all of this: your successor trustee distributes your estate privately, typically within weeks of your death, without any court involvement.
Ryan designs trust-based estate plans that include the revocable living trust, a companion pour-over will, healthcare and financial powers of attorney, and a healthcare directive — plus a complete funding plan. A trust document without funding is worthless; Ryan ensures every client completes the transfer of their real estate, financial accounts, and other significant assets before the plan is finalized.
A revocable living trust is not a single document — it is a coordinated system of documents and asset transfers that work together to achieve probate avoidance, incapacity protection, and controlled distribution.
The core legal document establishing the trust, naming trustees and successor trustees, defining beneficiary shares, and providing administration instructions. Ryan includes distribution standards, trustee powers, spendthrift protections for beneficiaries, and instructions for managing shares held for minors — all drafted for NC or SC law under the applicable Uniform Trust Code.
A companion will that directs any assets you forgot to fund into the trust at death. Without a pour-over will, unfunded assets pass through intestate succession. With one, they flow into the trust and are distributed under its terms — though they still go through probate first. Proper funding minimizes the assets subject to this backstop.
You serve as initial trustee. Your co-trustee (spouse or partner) steps in on your incapacity or death. A successor trustee — often a trusted adult child, sibling, or professional trustee — serves if the initial trustees cannot. Ryan helps clients think through the right succession structure for their family dynamics.
Transferring assets into the trust is the most critical step — and the most commonly skipped. Ryan prepares new deeds transferring real property into the trust and provides written instructions for re-titling financial accounts. An unfunded trust is a document that does nothing when needed most.
Authorizes your agent to manage assets held outside the trust — vehicles, certain financial accounts, and other property not yet transferred. Coordinates with the trust so there are no gaps in incapacity coverage. See Powers of Attorney for full details.
A healthcare power of attorney and living will operate alongside the trust for medical decisions. The trust handles financial assets; the healthcare documents handle medical choices. These must be coordinated — Ryan prepares them together as a unified plan.
The most common mistake in trust-based estate planning is signing the trust document but never funding it. An unfunded trust has no legal effect at death. Every significant asset must be transferred into the trust or have the trust named as beneficiary.
Real property must be re-titled via a new deed — a deed of trust transfer recorded with the county Register of Deeds. This is the highest-priority funding step for most families. Ryan prepares these deeds for NC and SC property as part of the trust engagement. The process: prepare deed → client signs before notary → record at county Register of Deeds. In NC, the deed transfer is exempt from real estate transfer tax (N.C.G.S. § 105-228.29(b)).
Contact your financial institution to retitle the account in the name of the trust: "Jane Smith, Trustee of the Jane Smith Revocable Living Trust dated January 1, 2026." Most major banks and brokerages handle this routinely. Ryan provides written funding instructions and a certificate of trust — a short document proving the trust exists without disclosing its terms.
Generally do NOT retitle retirement accounts into the trust — doing so triggers immediate income tax on the entire account balance. Instead, name a designated beneficiary directly on each account. Naming your trust as beneficiary is sometimes appropriate (for minor beneficiaries or spendthrift protection) but requires careful drafting. Ryan coordinates beneficiary designations as part of every trust engagement.
Name the trust as the primary or contingent beneficiary of life insurance policies. The death benefit then flows into the trust and is distributed under its terms rather than outright to a named individual. This is especially important when beneficiaries include minor children or adults with special needs.
Motor vehicles are often left outside the trust because re-titling requires a DMV visit and may affect insurance. North Carolina has a simplified procedure for transferring a vehicle owned by a deceased person to an heir under N.C.G.S. § 20-77 — Ryan advises clients on whether vehicles should be funded into the trust or left outside with a TOD (transfer-on-death) designation where available.
North Carolina's Uniform Trust Code (N.C.G.S. Ch. 36C) governs the creation, administration, and termination of trusts. A revocable trust may be created under N.C.G.S. § 36C-4-401 and is revocable by the settlor while living. The trustee owes duties of loyalty and prudent administration under §§ 36C-8-801 et seq.
NC does not require trust registration — trust administration is entirely private. There is no court filing requirement for a revocable trust. Successor trustees can act immediately upon the grantor's death or incapacity, presenting the trust certificate and death certificate to financial institutions.
North Carolina authorizes directed trusts and silent trusts under Ch. 36C, and recognizes spendthrift provisions under § 36C-5-502, which protect a beneficiary's trust interest from the beneficiary's own creditors.
South Carolina adopted its Uniform Trust Code effective January 1, 2006. S.C. Code § 62-7-601 governs revocation of revocable trusts. Trustee duties are codified in §§ 62-7-801 through 62-7-816, including the duty of loyalty, prudent investor standard, and duty to inform beneficiaries.
SC does not require trust registration or filing. Spendthrift provisions are recognized under § 62-7-502. South Carolina allows successor trustees to act upon presentation of the trust certificate and death certificate, bypassing the probate process entirely for trust assets.
| Feature | Last Will & Testament | Revocable Living Trust |
|---|---|---|
| When it takes effect | Takes effect only at death, after admission to probate. N.C.G.S. § 28A-2A-1 | Takes effect the moment it is signed and funded, and continues through incapacity and death. N.C.G.S. § 36C-4-401 |
| Probate avoidance | No. Assets passing under a will must go through NC Clerk of Superior Court probate. | Yes for any asset titled in the trust. The trust is administered privately, outside the probate court. |
| Privacy | Public. Once filed, the will and the estate inventory become public record at the Clerk's office. | Private. The trust instrument is generally not filed with any court and is not part of the public record. |
| Cost to create (relative) | Lower up-front cost; a typical NC will package is the least expensive document set. | Higher up-front cost because the trust must be drafted, signed, and then funded with deeds and beneficiary changes. |
| Cost at death (relative) | Higher. Probate filing fees, the 40¢-per-$100 Clerk's fee, accountings, and attorney time add up. | Lower. A funded trust avoids probate fees and most court-supervised steps for trust assets. |
| Amendable while alive | Yes, by executing a codicil or a new will with proper formalities. N.C.G.S. § 31-3.3 | Yes, by a signed written amendment or full restatement at any time while the settlor is competent. N.C.G.S. § 36C-6-602 |
| Asset management if incapacitated | None. A will only operates at death; incapacity is handled by a power of attorney or court-appointed guardian. | Built in. The successor trustee steps in to manage trust assets the moment the settlor is incapacitated, with no court involvement. |
| Out-of-state real estate | Triggers a separate "ancillary" probate in every state where you own real property. | Real estate deeded into the trust passes under the trust regardless of state, avoiding ancillary probate. |
| Naming a guardian for minor children | Required. A guardian for minor children can only be nominated in a will under NC law. N.C.G.S. § 35A-1224 | Cannot nominate a guardian; a trust may hold assets for minors but the guardianship designation must still be in a will. |
| Court supervision | Active. The Clerk of Superior Court supervises the executor through inventories, accountings, and a final discharge. | None by default. The trustee acts under the trust terms and the NC Uniform Trust Code. N.C.G.S. Ch. 36C |
| Best for… | Smaller, simpler estates, single-state assets, and families whose top priority is naming a guardian and an executor. | Owners of real estate (especially in more than one state), blended families, business owners, and anyone who wants privacy and incapacity protection. |
Anyone who owns real estate is a strong candidate for a trust. Property held in the trust avoids the NC or SC probate process entirely — no 12-month waiting period, no court supervision.
A trust lets you control how and when your children receive their inheritance — staggered distributions at 25, 30, 35 rather than a lump sum at 18. Families with a child who has a disability should also read our guide to Special Needs Trusts in North Carolina for protecting government benefits like SSI and Medicaid.
Trust ownership of a business interest can simplify succession and avoid the disruption of probate during a critical transition period.
A trust can establish clear, legally binding distribution terms for complex family structures — spouse and children from a prior relationship — removing ambiguity that intestate law creates.
Trusts provide the framework for more sophisticated planning — dynasty provisions, generation-skipping, charitable components, and coordination with life insurance strategies.
If keeping your estate distribution private matters to you, a trust is essential. Wills become public record in probate. Trust distributions remain confidential.
The most common and most costly trust mistake. A trust document sitting in a drawer with no assets transferred into it will not avoid probate. Every significant asset must be re-titled into the trust or have the trust named as beneficiary. Ryan provides a complete written funding plan and prepares real estate deeds as part of every trust engagement.
Re-titling an IRA or 401(k) in the name of the trust is treated as a complete distribution — the entire balance becomes taxable income in that year. Retirement accounts should almost always remain in individual ownership with carefully chosen beneficiary designations.
The successor trustee has significant power and responsibility — managing assets, coordinating with financial institutions, and distributing to beneficiaries without court supervision. Choosing someone who is financially unsophisticated, geographically distant, or in conflict with the beneficiaries creates serious problems. Ryan helps clients think through trustee selection carefully.
Assets acquired after the trust is created — or assets the client forgot to fund — are left without a direction if there is no pour-over will. These assets pass by intestate succession to your statutory heirs, not to your trust beneficiaries. Every trust plan must include a coordinated will.
A revocable living trust is transparent for income and estate tax purposes — it provides no tax benefits during the grantor's lifetime. Assets in a revocable trust are still included in the taxable estate at death. Tax-reduction strategies (irrevocable trusts, charitable giving, annual exclusion gifting) are separate planning tools.
Revocable living trusts are the right tool for many families — but they are not always the right tool. Understanding when a will-based plan is preferable saves money and avoids unnecessary complexity.
A revocable living trust adds cost (typically 2–3x the cost of a will-based plan) and ongoing administrative responsibility (you must fund the trust during your lifetime). For some families, those costs are not justified by meaningful probate-avoidance or privacy benefits. Specifically:
A revocable trust provides flexibility and probate avoidance, but NO asset protection during your lifetime — because you retain control, your creditors can reach trust assets. For asset protection, Medicaid planning (5-year look-back), or estate tax reduction, an irrevocable trust is the appropriate structure. Irrevocable trusts include:
Ryan focuses on revocable living trust and will-based estate plans. For irrevocable trust planning — particularly Medicaid planning or sophisticated estate tax strategies — Ryan refers clients to specialists with elder law or high-net-worth tax planning focus.
The fundamental question: does your estate include assets that would benefit from probate avoidance? Real property (homes, land) and titled personal property (vehicles, boats) generally do. Retirement accounts, life insurance, and beneficiary-designated bank accounts generally do not (they bypass probate already). If most of your wealth is in beneficiary-designated accounts and you own no real property — or only your primary residence with a properly executed transfer-on-death deed — a will-based plan may be entirely sufficient. Ryan provides honest assessments during the initial consultation rather than reflexively recommending trusts.