When making your living trust estate plan, you will need to identify key people to fill key roles. One of them is your Successor Trustee.
Your successor trustee is the person who will manage your assets by following the instructions in your living trust if you become incapacitated or when you pass away.
Being a successor trustee is a very important job, and choosing the right person requires careful consideration.
Our law firm has over thirty years of experience in helping successor trustees administer trusts. Through this experience, we’ve learned there are four characteristics that make a good successor trustee:
Sometimes family or friends are not an option, and the only option is to name a professional trustee aka professional fiduciary. Professional fiduciaries can be a very good option. They often have a management or accounting background and are experienced in administering trusts. What they lack in familiarity with your beneficiaries, they can make up for in their professional approach to carrying out their duties.
Choosing the right person as your successor trustee is important, but don’t make it a debilitating process. If you do not have an estate plan, you need one. Most people do not have the perfect successor trustee. And that’s ok because most of us are not perfect.
Choosing an imperfect someone and completing your estate plan is better than not having an estate plan and leaving your loved ones to go through probate with a judge choosing your executor.
Don’t overthink it. The four characteristics we list above are guidelines. Pick the most qualified person among your family and friends, and if none of them meet the basic criteria, then you can use a professional fiduciary.
And to take the pressure off, your decision is not set in stone. You can always amend your trust and change your successor trustee.
Many of our clients update their successor trustees every few years. Often your pool of candidates become more defined over time - your brother gets married and becomes more stable, your children get older and more mature, your friend or business partner show themselves to be even more reliable than you thought.
Your estate plan is a lot like your life. It is not static. It will change over time, and hopefully for the better.