| Exploring Trusts A trust is a legal
agreement between yourself and a trust company. Essentially,
you place your assets
into an account and the trust company agrees to manage the
assets and execute your instructions regarding their distribution.
To
illustrate the advantages of having a trust, consider the
case
of a newly-retired couple living on their life savings
because they decided to avoid the perceived complexity of
having a
trust account: They get by (let’s say they have £1,000,000
in the bank) then one day the husband dies. Half of the money
is transferred to his wife, tax free in accordance with the
law. This means the wife gets £500,000. Then one
day she dies and the government takes its share in taxes.
The couple has four
children, so what’s left over is split four ways:
Government
(taxes) £200,000
Children £800,000 (£200,000 each)
In other words, the government takes as much as each child
receives.
Whether or not this is fair is academic since
this is the law and that’s how inheritances are decided
in such a case. There is another way though: With a trust
fund, the couple in
our example could’ve set it up to let them receive £50,000
each year for the rest of their lives, with the rest
to be distributed tax free to their heirs when they die.
As
the example above shows, having a trust can yield
clear benefits while being simple and straightforward
as any
other financial
plan. While trusts may seem complicated, the reality
is that they are simpler than their popular image may
suggest. |