A trust that was perfectly drafted 10 years ago may be dangerously inadequate today. Changes in your family, your assets, the law, and your goals can all render a trust ineffective or even harmful. An outdated trust can distribute assets to the wrong people, fail to protect beneficiaries who need protection, create unnecessary tax consequences, and leave gaps that force your family into court.
Signs Your Trust Needs Updating
Life Changes
Your trust should be reviewed and potentially updated whenever a major life event occurs. This includes marriage, divorce, or remarriage; the birth or adoption of a child or grandchild; the death of a beneficiary, trustee, or agent named in the trust; a significant change in your financial situation; a move to or from California; or a change in your relationship with someone named in the trust.
Legal Changes
Tax laws change frequently, and estate planning strategies that were optimal under old law may be counterproductive under current law. The federal estate tax exemption has changed dramatically over the past two decades, and it is scheduled to decrease significantly in 2026. California's Proposition 19, which took effect in February 2021, changed the rules for property tax reassessment on inherited properties. If your trust was created before these changes, it may need restructuring.
The Trust Was Never Properly Funded
If you acquired new assets since creating your trust (a new home, new bank accounts, a business interest) and those assets were never transferred into the trust, they are not protected. Unfunded assets will go through probate regardless of what the trust says.
Trust Amendment vs. Trust Restatement
When a trust needs updating, you generally have two options. A trust amendment changes specific provisions while leaving the rest of the trust intact. Amendments work well for minor changes, such as updating a trustee designation, adding a beneficiary, or adjusting a distribution provision. However, multiple amendments over time can create confusion and increase the risk of contradictory provisions.
A trust restatement replaces the entire content of the trust while maintaining the same trust entity and date of creation. This is the preferred approach when multiple changes are needed or when the trust has already been amended several times. A restatement produces a single, clean document that is easier for successor trustees and beneficiaries to follow.
Critical Updates Many Trusts Need
- Proposition 19 compliance: Trusts created before 2021 may include provisions that inadvertently trigger property tax reassessment on inherited properties under the new rules.
- Estate tax provisions: AB trust provisions that were essential under the old, lower exemption amounts may now create unnecessary income tax consequences for surviving spouses.
- Digital asset provisions: Most trusts created before 2015 do not include provisions for digital assets, cryptocurrency, online accounts, or social media profiles.
- Incapacity provisions: Older trusts may have inadequate incapacity definitions that do not reflect modern medical and legal standards.
- Special needs provisions: If a beneficiary has developed a disability or begun receiving government benefits, the trust may need special needs provisions added to protect their eligibility.
How Often Should You Review Your Trust?
We recommend a comprehensive trust review every 3 to 5 years, even if no major life events have occurred. Tax laws, property laws, and estate planning best practices evolve continuously. A periodic review ensures your trust remains current and effective. Many of our clients schedule their trust review alongside their annual financial planning meeting, making it a routine part of their overall financial maintenance.
The Cost of Not Updating
Updating a trust typically costs a fraction of what it cost to create the original document. A simple amendment might cost $500 to $1,000. A full restatement for a married couple typically costs $2,000 to $3,500. Compare that to the potential costs of an outdated trust: probate fees of $46,000 on a $1 million estate, unnecessary estate taxes that could reach six figures, family disputes that cost tens of thousands in litigation, or a beneficiary losing government benefits worth hundreds of thousands over their lifetime.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Every family's circumstances are unique. Contact MVP Law Group for a consultation to discuss your specific situation.