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Free Joint Living Trust Funding Worksheet

This worksheet provides a convenient method to list all assets owned by the grantor(s) and provides explanatory information regarding whether and how to transfer assets into the living trust. Each asset can be tagged for automatic inclusion on (a) a bill of transfer document, (b) a trust property schedule, and/or (c) a property ownership memorandum.

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How to write your Joint Living Trust Funding Worksheet

 
 
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Reasons to Create

- You want to list the assets owned by a married person which may be transferred a living trust or joint living trust.
- You want to learn information about whether and how to transfer various asset categories into a living trust.
- You want to create a bill of transfer document with which to transfer ownership of various assets to a living trust.
- You want to create a trust property schedule for the benefit of the trustee and successor trustee, which lists all assets transferred to a living trust.
- You want to create a property ownership memorandum to change and/or clarify the ownership of the assets of married persons, to be either the separate property of one spouse or joint property of the couple.
 

Before You Begin

Information you will need:
- A detailed list of all assets owned by you which are being considered for transfer to the living trust or joint living trust.
- For married individuals, a detailed list of all assets owned by either of you, even assets not to be transferred to the trust. (This list will be necessary only if you intend to prepare a property ownership memorandum to clarify and/or shift the ownership of the marital assets between the spouses.)
- A detailed list of all debts. (This list will be necessary only if you intend to prepare a list of those debts for the informational benefit of the successor trustee.)
- A list of all agents and their addresses who might assist you in transferring assets and/or changing beneficiaries.
 

Reasons to Update

- You want to include new categories of assets in the worksheet in order to obtain information regarding transfer advice and instructions.
- You need to transfer additional assets to the living trust by using the Bill of Transfer.
- You need to add or remove assets from the Trust Property Schedule to reflect the current status of the living trust assets.
- You want to add, remove, or change assets on the Property Ownership Memorandum to reflect the current intentions of the married couple.
 
 
Document Help
Joint Living Trust Funding Worksheet

In addition to creating and signing a living trust document, assets must be transferred into the trust. A living trust only owns the assets that are actually transferred into the trust. Any assets that remain titled in the name of a grantor will be subject to potential probate administration at the death of that grantor. (The exceptions include assets which (a) are held jointly with another person with rights of survivorship, for example a home, (b) pass pursuant to "transfer-on-death" or "pay-on-death" designations, for example bank accounts, or (c) pass by beneficiary designation, for example retirement plans and life insurance.) Assets should be transferred from the grantor to the trust to achieve the result that the property is then legally owned by the trust. Then, upon the grantor's death, because the trust (as owner) survives the grantor's death, it is not necessary to use the probate system to effectuate a transfer of the assets to the grantor's beneficiaries. Instead, the (successor) trustee can distribute the assets in accordance with the trust provisions.

Assets can be transferred to a living trust both at the time of the creation of the trust and also at later times. Separate transfer documents must be used for this purpose because the trust document itself does not contain any language of conveyance or any list of assets.

This worksheet provides a convenient method to list all assets owned by the grantors. With each category of assets, explanatory information is provided with which to decide whether and how to transfer the asset into the living trust. For easy reference, that same information will be printed on the worksheet with the asset category. Further, each asset can be tagged to automatically be included on (a) a bill of transfer document, (b) a trust property schedule, and/or (c) a property ownership memorandum. These documents can then be printed and used for their intended purposes. They can also be saved and updated periodically as appropriate.


For More Information:
Bank Accounts
Bill of Transfer
Brokerage Accounts
Certification of Trust
Closely-held Business Interests
Clothing and Personal Effects
Collections, Collectibles and Antiques
Debts
Gas, Oil, and Mineral Rights
Household Goods, Furniture and Furnishings
Incentive Stock Options
Individual Retirement Account or Keogh Account
Initial Trustee
Isolation of Trust Assets
Installment Obligations
Jewelry
Life Insurance Policy
Living Trust Tax Return
Marital Status
Partnership Interests (with restrictions on transfer)
Patents, Copyrights and Trademarks
Periodic Review
Privately-held Securities
Promissory Notes
Property Ownership ("Yours\Mine\Ours") Memorandum
Protecting Trust Assets
Publicly Traded Securities in Certificate Form
Qualified (Employment) Retirement Plan
Real Estate
Signing Instructions - Bill of Transfer
Signing Instructions - Joint Living Trust Funding Worksheet
Successor Trustee Name
Tax Basis in Assets
Trust Property Schedule
Untitled Recreational Equipment
U.S. Savings Bonds and Treasury Bills, Notes or Bonds
Works of Art
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