| name | us-trust-advisor |
| description | US Trust Architecture and Cross-Border Asset Allocation Expert Knowledge Base. Activate this skill immediately when user asks about: trust establishment, trust architecture design, irrevocable/revocable trusts, trustee/protector/settlor roles, wills/trust agreements, sub-trusts/Private Trust Companies (PTC), family offices (SFO/MFO), cross-border asset protection, estate tax planning (Estate Tax), CRS evasion compliance, FATCA, offshore trust jurisdictions (Cook Islands, South Dakota, Cayman, BVI), European foundations, passport planning/investment immigration, geopolitical asset defense, trust KYC compliance, trust fee structures, Asset Protection Trusts (APT)/ILIT/Dynasty Trusts. Even if user doesn't explicitly say "trust", activate immediately for cross-border wealth transfer, high-net-worth asset protection, identity planning, or CRS penetration risk involving offshore structures.
|
US Trust Architecture & Cross-Border Asset Allocation
Strategic Overview
This skill provides comprehensive guidance on US trust structures, cross-border asset protection strategies, and compliance-first wealth transfer planning for high-net-worth individuals with international exposure.
Key Principles:
- Trusts operate under state law (not federal), with wide variation in creditor protection and tax efficiency
- Irrevocable trusts provide strongest asset protection but surrender settlor control
- Revocable trusts provide probate avoidance and mental incapacity planning, but zero creditor protection
- Offshore trusts face heightened FATCA/CRS scrutiny; compliance is mandatory
- Family offices centralize wealth management and governance across jurisdictions
Trust Types & Architecture
Revocable Living Trusts
Use Case: Probate avoidance, mental incapacity management, privacy
- Settlor maintains full control and revocation right
- Assets EXCLUDED from probate when properly funded
- Fully taxable to settlor (grantor trust rules)
- Zero protection from creditors (settlor can still access, so creditors can reach)
- Cost: $2,000-$5,000 setup; minimal annual compliance
- Timeline: 30-60 days to establish
Irrevocable Trusts
Use Case: Gift/estate tax reduction, creditor protection, charitable giving
Key subtypes:
Grantor Retained Annuity Trusts (GRAT)
- Settlor receives annuity payment for term; remainder to beneficiaries
- Excess growth passes tax-free to heirs
- Best in rising markets; 2-10 year terms typical
- IRS rate-dependent (current ~5.2%)
Intentional Defective Grantor Trusts (IDGT)
- Intentionally "defective" for income tax (settlor pays income tax)
- But effective for estate tax (assets grow outside taxable estate)
- Allows settlor to fund with discounted present value
- Complex; requires tax return reporting
Charitable Remainder Trusts (CRT)
- Settlor receives income stream; charity receives remainder
- Generates immediate charitable deduction
- Splits: Charitable Remainder Annuity Trust (CRAT) vs. Charitable Remainder Unitrust (CRUT)
Irrevocable Life Insurance Trusts (ILIT)
- Holds life insurance outside taxable estate
- Removes death benefit (typically $1M+) from estate tax
- Premium: $5,000-$25,000+; Trustee must handle premium funding
- Lapses Crummey letters required; compliance-heavy
Dynasty Trusts
Use Case: Multi-generational wealth protection (100+ years)
- Deep perpetual nature in certain jurisdictions (South Dakota, Delaware, Nevada)
- Utilize Generation-Skipping Transfer (GST) exemption ($13.61M per person, 2024)
- No estate tax on distributions to great-grandchildren if properly structured
- Extreme complexity; requires specialist counsel ($50K-$150K+ one-time)
Asset Protection Trusts (APT)
Offshore APT (Cook Islands, Nevis, BVI)
- Settlor retains some interest (e.g., as income beneficiary)
- Creditors cannot reach assets once irrevocably transferred
- Requires genuine offshore nexus; US courts may not recognize
- $50K-$300K setup; $5K-$10K annual compliance
Self-Settled APT (permitted in Delaware, Nevada, South Dakota since late 1990s)
- Settlor creates irrevocable trust for own benefit
- Creditors have limited recourse (state law dependent)
- Less certain than offshore APT; some courts skeptical
- Cost: $15K-$50K setup
Private Trust Companies (PTC)
Definition: Family-owned trustee entity, typically a corporation in favorable jurisdiction
Advantages:
- Family members serve as trustee; full control over distributions
- Professional management without third-party trustee conflicts
- Privacy (no bank trustee = less regulatory scrutiny)
- Can manage multiple family trusts
Disadvantages:
- Requires capital contribution ($50K-$500K typical)
- Must hire professional advisor or CIO
- Delaware/Nevada PTC licensing required
- Annual compliance costs: $15K-$30K
Typical Structure:
Family Assets → Revocable Master Trust (settlor control)
├→ Irrevocable Sub-Trusts (tax planning)
└→ Managed by PTC (family trustee)
Offshore Trust Jurisdictions Comparison
| Jurisdiction | Trust Law Strength | Tax Treaty with US | Asset Protection | Cost | Use Case |
|---|
| Cook Islands | Excellent (1981 trust act) | No | Very strong | $30K-$80K setup | Creditor protection, high-risk professions |
| South Dakota | Excellent (recent APT statute) | State (US), no treaty needed | Strong | $20K-$50K setup | US resident, self-settled APT, privacy |
| Nevada | Very strong (corporate-friendly) | State (US) | Very strong | $25K-$60K setup | Self-settled APT, no state income tax |
| Delaware | Very strong (old trust law) | State (US), familiar to courts | Strong | $20K-$50K setup | Well-established, widest case law |
| Cayman Islands | Strong (English common law) | No | Strong | $40K-$100K setup | International clients, hedge fund structures |
| British Virgin Islands (BVI) | Very strong | No | Very strong | $35K-$90K setup | Flexible law, strong privacy |
CRS Reporting Requirement: All offshore trusts are "Financial Accounts" under FATCA/CRS. Settlor must report via FBAR (FinCEN Form 114) and FATCA Form 8938 (if applicable).
European Foundations (Alternative to Trust)
Civil law countries (Germany, France, etc.) use foundations instead of trusts (trusts don't exist in civil law)
Foundation Structure:
- Settler transfers assets irrevocably to foundation corpus
- Foundation governed by board/council
- Assets held for declared charitable/private purpose
- No beneficiaries per se; distributions per foundation by-laws
Tax Treatment: Generally more favorable than trusts in EU; some countries allow private purposes.
Compliance: FATCA/CRS still apply; must report as "Non-US Financial Entity" (NFFE) or equivalent
Trust Tax Implications
Income Tax
- Revocable Trust: Grantor trust rules; income taxable to settlor
- Irrevocable Trust: Distributable Net Income (DNI); income taxable to trust unless distributed to beneficiary
- Trust Income Tax Rates: Compress quickly (37% top bracket at ~$14K income, 2024); beneficiaries may have lower brackets
Estate Tax
- Revocable Trust: Fully includible in taxable estate (assets × 40% tax if > $13.61M, 2024)
- Irrevocable Trust: Removed from taxable estate if requirements met
- Exceptions: Retained interest (GRAT), retained control (Crummey gift issues), retained income (IDGT)
Generation-Skipping Tax (GST)
- Dynasty Trusts: Must allocate GST exemption ($13.61M, 2024) or face 40% GST tax on distant generation distributions
- Taxation Happens: When assets skip generational level (grandchild, great-grandchild receives distribution)
- Exemption Allocation: Must file Form 709 to allocate at time of gift/trust creation
Gift Tax
- Annual Exclusion: $18K per person (2024), unlimited to spouses via portability
- Lifetime Exemption: $13.61M (2024), consumed on gifts > annual exclusion
- Crummey Powers: Beneficiary right to withdraw trust distributions for limited period (30 days typical); converts gift to present interest (qualifies for exclusion)
- Valuation Discounts: Fractional gift planning (e.g., LP/LLC interests discounted 20-40% for illiquidity); IRS highly scrutinizes
CRS & FATCA Penetration in Trusts
Critical Compliance Point: Trusts are not opaque to CRS/FATCA.
For Offshore Trusts
- Settlor identified as "Controlling Person" (if settlor retained any interest or control)
- Beneficiaries identified (if determinable)
- Trustee reports beneficiary residence & tax ID to home tax authority via AEOI
For US Trusts with Offshore Beneficiaries
- If beneficiary is non-US person, trust must file Form W-8BEN-E (claim treaty benefits) or Form W-8IMY (withholding agent)
- US-source income (dividend, interest) subject to 30% withholding unless treaty reduces
- Trust must register as Financial Institution under FATCA if managing other entities' funds
For US Settlors with Offshore Trusts
- FBAR filing (FinCEN Form 114): Settlor must report offshore trust assets if > $10K aggregate
- FATCA Form 8938: Settlor reports offshore trust accounts if > threshold ($600K aggregate for joint filers, 2024)
- Failure to file: 50% civil penalty on unreported account balance
Practical Wealth Transfer Planning
Three-Tier Capital Structure (High-Net-Worth Model)
Liquid Core ($100K-$500K)
├→ ILIT (life insurance, outside taxable estate)
├→ CRT (charitable planning + income stream)
└→ Revocable Master Trust (probate avoidance, flexibility)
Growth Assets ($1M-$10M+)
├→ Dynasty Trust (multi-generational, GST exemption allocated)
├→ IDGT (insurance premium funding, investment growth)
└→ Private Trust Company (trustee, discretionary distributions)
International Exposure ($500K-$5M+)
├→ Offshore APT (creditor protection, privacy)
├→ European Foundation (if EU assets, favorable tax)
└→ FATCA/CRS Reporting Hub (consolidated compliance)
Common Wealth Transfer Mistakes
- Over-utilizing revocable trusts: No tax benefit, no creditor protection
- Failure to fund trust: Assets titled in personal name = probate = defeats purpose
- Failure to allocate GST exemption: Generations beyond children lose tax exemption ($13.61M wasted)
- Improper ILIT funding: Crummey letters not sent; gifts treated as future interest (not excluded)
- Neglecting CRS/FATCA: Offshore trust not reported; discovery = penalties 50%+ of account value
- Ignoring state law conflicts: Multi-state assets; trust drafted under one state law but assets in another jurisdiction
KYC Compliance for Trustees
Trust Settlor (person creating trust):
- ID verification (passport, driver's license)
- Beneficial ownership form (source of wealth)
- Purpose of trust (creditor protection, tax reduction, privacy, etc.)
- Regulatory status check (US person, non-US person, sanctions list)
Trust Beneficiaries (if named):
- Relationship to settlor
- Residency (US/non-US)
- Tax identification number (SSN/ITIN for US, TIN for foreign)
Trustee (entity managing trust):
- If corporate trustee: Articles of incorporation, beneficial owners
- If individual trustee: Full ID, tax status, conflict-of-interest disclosures
Protector (if appointed):
- Independent oversight role; not settlor/trustee/beneficiary
- Can veto trustee distributions, change jurisdiction (migration clause)
Fee Structure Benchmarks
| Role | Annual Cost |
|---|
| Trust setup (attorney fees) | $2K-$50K depending on complexity |
| Trustee fees (professional company) | 0.5%-1.5% of assets under management, min $5K-$10K |
| Private Trust Company governance | $15K-$30K annual (professional CIO/advisor) |
| Accountant/CPA annual compliance | $5K-$15K depending on complexity |
| Offshore trust setup (Cook Islands/Cayman) | $30K-$100K one-time |
| Offshore trust annual compliance | $5K-$15K (filing, banking relationship management) |
| Dynasty trust every-20-year tax reporting | $10K-$30K (IRS Form 706-GS(T)) |
| CRS/FATCA annual reporting service | $2K-$8K (depends on beneficiary count) |
Red Flags & IRS Scrutiny
High-risk trust strategies attracting IRS audit:
- Discounted gifts: LP/LLC fractional gifts >25% discount to FMV
- GRAT with short terms (under 3 years)
- IDGT with premium funding exceeding reasonable interest rate
- Sham trust arrangements: Trust in high-privacy jurisdiction but settlor retains all control
- Trust splitting income: Beneficiary in low-bracket state trying to shift income to state with no tax
CRS Red Flags:
- Trust created after 2016 (more recent structures more scrutinized)
- Settlor is US person with offshore trust (triggers all FATCA/CRS reporting)
- Beneficiary is non-US but receives distributions in US
- Trustee fails to register as Financial Institution when required
Disclaimer: This skill provides educational framework only. Trust law varies by jurisdiction and involves substantial tax/legal complexity. All trust planning must be done with qualified estate planning attorney licensed in your jurisdiction. This content is not legal advice.