Land Trusts
A land trust is a private agreement, where one party, the trustee, agrees to hold title to property for the benefit of another party or parties, the beneficiary(ies). The one who establishes the trust is the settlor or grantor. The settlor is usually the titleholder to the property before transfer into the trust. The settlor is often the beneficiary of the trust for his/her lifetime. Alternatively, for income property, the beneficiary may transfer beneficial interest in the trust to a limited liability company (LLC).
Thus, the trustee holds the title to the property. If so drafted, the trustee must follow the instructions of the beneficiary. The beneficiary typically has the absolute right to direct and control the trustee and receive all income from the trust. The trust agreement, at the creation of the trust, governs the relationship between the trustee and beneficiary. Thus, the trustee often has no more power than the settlor gives him. Plus, he or she has no function other than to do as the trust deed instructs.
Land trusts are most often revocable. Therefore, the trustor may change, modify, or terminate them while he is, or she is still alive. The beneficiaries may remove an uncooperative trustee. Since the trustee holds title as a fiduciary, they incur no personal liability for merely being on the title. Nor can the trustee lose the property to his or her personal creditors.
Land Trust Pros and Cons
Land Trust Benefits
There are many land trust benefits. Here are some of the biggest advantages:
- Privacy of ownership
- Ease of transfer (by assigning beneficial interest in the trust to another party)
- Privacy of transfer (assigning beneficial interest is typically not public)
- Liability protection (a contingent fee attorney may not accept a case if he/she cannot find assets)
- Can use in any US state (not all states have land trust laws, but can use in all states)
- Helps to avoid due-on-sale clause (for one to four dwelling units)
- Keeps sales price secret
- Helps prevent property liens
- Can eliminate or minimize probate fees
Land Trust Disadvantages
Whereas land trust have many benefits, there are also some small disadvantages, as follows:
- Obtaining financing (may need to place property in personal name to obtain financing and transfer back into the trust afterwards)
- Does not protect property from lawsuits (need to include an LLC, for example, as the beneficiary)
How Land Trusts Protect Privacy
The land trust is comprised of two legal documents.
- There is a trust agreement between the trustor and the trustee. This document establishes the rights, powers, duties, and obligations of the parties; and
- A deed from the trustor to the trustee.
First, you execute the trust agreement. Then, you record the trustee deed. Once completed, the land titles office will no longer reveal to the world that you are owner of the property. In addition, the trust agreement remains private (in your file cabinet at home). Thus, no one need ever know that you retain an interest in the property. That is, the public records will not reveal this information.
Litigators generally have not interest in suing people who have no assets. One of the easiest ways to determine whether or not someone has deep pockets is to search the public records for real estate holdings. For the successful real estate investor, the results of this search could paint a big fat bull’s eye on their backs.
LLC + Land Trust for Asset Protection
First, remember, a land trust is a privacy device, and not a corporate entity. Accordingly, land trusts do not enjoy the liability protections that corporations or limited liability companies may enjoy. If someone slips and falls on the property, the beneficiary can be held liable. That is why we establish a corporation, LLC or limited partnership to serve as beneficiary.
Second, one can usually transfer property into a land trust free from taxation. The internal revenue code addresses this. The federal government will treat the property as if it was owned outright by the beneficiary. See I.R.C. §§ 671- 678. In addition, in many states, the transfer of property by a beneficiary to a revocable trust does not require the payment of any transfer or recording taxes.
Finally, many investors may ask around and find that the attorneys and accountants with whom they come in contact have no idea what a land trust is, or how it works. While this can certainly be frustrating, there is an upside. Think about it. This means that many of the litigators in your community will be unfamiliar with land trusts. A significant number will stop their search for deep pockets at the end of the public records trail – the county recorder’s office.
Benefits of a Land Trust
There are many advantages to owning real estate through a Land Trust:
- Privacy of Ownership – Under a Land Trust arrangement, your identity as the legal owner of the real estate is not disclosed to the public or to any third party, except in cases of subpoena or court order.
- Ease of Transferability – The beneficiary (or “owner”) of a land trust may be changed without recording a change in the public records.
- Avoids Probate – Probate is usually necessary regardless of whether or not one has a will. A Land Trust arrangement, however, allows you to designate succession of ownership. You can do this exactly as you wish, thereby avoiding probate and costly, time-consuming proceedings relating to the property.
- Facilitates Multiple Ownership – Where there are multiple owners of a parcel of real estate, a Land Trust can be structured to provide for clear and easy legal division.
- You Retain Tax Advantage – You are still eligible for the homeowner’s and senior citizen’s real estate tax exemptions.
Keep in mind, a land trust provides privacy of ownership, not true asset protection. There are tools that can provide true real estate asset protection So, you can use land trust for lawsuit prevention. That is, you so a contingent fee attorney does not readily see that you have “deep pockets” the land trust conceals our ownership. For liquid assets, on the other hand offshore trusts provide the most powerful asset protection. Here are some offshore asset protection examples that you may very well want to know about.
3 DIFFERENT TYPES OF COMMERCIAL REAL ESTATE LEASES Affidavit of death Affidavit of heirship AFFIDAVIT OF SURVIVORSHIP affidavit of title ASSET PROTECTION TRUST ASSIGNMENT AGREEMENT ASSUMPTION AGREEMENT Beneficiary deeds CHAIN OF TITLE CO-OWNERSHIP COMMERCIAL LEASE COOWNERSHIP Corrective deed ELEMENTS OF A REAL ESTATE CONTRACT EQUITY GIFT IN REAL ESTATE ESTOPPEL CERTIFICATE FSBO FSBO SALE FSBO TRANSACTION GENERAL WARRANTY DEED GIFT AFFIDAVIT GIFT EQUITY GIFT TAX GRANT DEED HOME OWNER ASSOCIATION VIOLATIONS LAND PATENT LOAN ASSUMPTION AGREEMENT MISSOURI ADMINISTRATORS DEED MISSOURI EXECUTOR DEED NOVATION AGREEMENT PAYBACK FIRST TIME HOME BUYERS CREDIT PRIVACY TRUST QUIT CLAIM DEED REAL ESTATE CONTRACTS Renter Crisis seller financing SUBJECT TO AGREEMENTS SURVIVORSHIP AFFIDAVIT TENANTS IN COMMON TRANSFER ON DEATH DEED TRIPLE NET LEASE UNEQUAL OWNERSHIP INTEREST WARRANTY DEED WHAT IS A GIFT OF EQUITY
- INVESTMENT FIRMS MAKING IT DIFFICULT FOR FIRST-TIME HOME BUYERS
- OPEN DOOR TO PAY $62,000,000.00 FOR DECEPTIVE TRADE PRACTICES
- EVERYTHING YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT REAL ESTATE CONTRACTS
- LAND TRUSTS – THE ULTIMATE ASSET PROTECTION
- INTEREST RATES VS. PROPERTY VALUE
- About Us
- Blog
- Contact Us
- Discounted Commission Seller/Buyer Representation – St. Louis – Kansas City – Kansas
- FAQ
- FSBO Contract For Deed – St. Louis – Kansas City – Kansas
- FSBO Contract For Deed Fees – St. Louis – Kansas City – Kansas
- FSBO Discounted MLS/Buyer Representation Fees – St. Louis – Kansas City – Kansas
- FSBO Marketplace Trends – St. Louis – Kansas City – Kansas
- FSBO Midwest Kansas City – St. Louis – Kansas City – Kansas
- FSBO Midwest St. Louis – St. Louis – Kansas City – Kansas
- FSBO Non-owner Financed – St. Louis – Kansas City – Kansas
- FSBO Non-owner Financed Fees – St. Louis – Kansas City – Kansas
- FSBO Owner Financed – St. Louis – Kansas City – Kansas
- FSBO Owner Financed Fees – St. Louis – Kansas City – Kansas
- FSBO Quit Claim Deeds Fees – St. Louis – Kansas City – Kansas
- Glossary of Terms – St. Louis – Kansas City – Kansas
- Kansas Resources – St. Louis – Kansas City – Kansas
- Missouri Resources – St. Louis – Kansas City – Kansas
- MLS Commission Rates – St. Louis – Kansas City – Kansas
- Quit Claim Deeds – St. Louis – Kansas City – Kansas
- Sitemap – St. Louis – Kansas City – Kansas
- St. Louis Local Gallery – St. Louis – Kansas City – Kansas
- Boundaries
- Deeds
- Divorce
- Estate Planning
- For Sale by Owner
- For Sale By Owner in Kansas City
- FSBO
- FSBO Kansas City
- Home Buying
- Home Selling
- Land Use
- llc
- Locations
- Real Estate Brokers
- real estate finance, FSBO, real estate markets, home buyers, home sellers
- Real Estate Markets
- Tax-Related Issues
- Title Issues
- Uncategorized