What is the difference between a living will and a living trust?
Question:
What is the
difference between a living will and a living trust?
Answer:
These two very
important estate planning devices are quite different from each other but serve
similar purposes. A living will lets you manage your health-care decisions in
case you become incapacitated. A living trust lets you manage your property in
case you become incapacitated.
A living will is not
actually a will at all. It is a legal document that becomes effective if you
become so ill or injured that you can't make responsible health-care decisions
for yourself. It lets you approve or decline certain types of medical care in
advance, even if you die as a result.
A living will is
allowed only in some states. If you don't live in one of those states, you may
be able to accomplish the same goal using a durable power of attorney for
health care, health-care proxy, or Do Not Resuscitate order.
By comparison, a living
trust is just what it says. It is a revocable trust you create while you are
living. You transfer property to the trust, and the trust then "owns"
it. You name yourself as trustee and someone else as a successor trustee. You
manage the property in the trust unless you become incapacitated (or until you
die), in which case your successor trustee automatically steps in to continue
managing the property for you.
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