Trust Funding: Setting Your Trustee Up for Success

·2 min read·540 words

Quick Answer

Trust funding means transferring your assets into your living trust, or naming the trust as beneficiary. This ensures your trust's instructions are followed and avoids probate. Proper funding makes it easier for your trustee to manage your assets if you become incapacitated or pass away.

Featured image for Trust Funding: Setting Your Trustee Up for Success - Missouri probate and estate planning legal guide

For many people, a revocable living trust is a valuable tool to ensure that their finances are well managed during periods of incapacity and that their loved ones are financially secure upon their passing. However, signing the trust agreement doesn’t end the estate planning process: To work properly, the trust needs to be funded.

What Is Trust Funding?

Trust funding is the process of transferring the ownership of accounts and property to the trust during your lifetime, or designating the trust as a beneficiary of an account or piece of property so that the trust will receive ownership upon your passing.

Trust Funding as a First Step for Trust Administration

Not only does a completely funded trust avoid the probate process, it can also make the trust administration process much easier.

  • Accessing your accounts and property will be less complicated. If you have properly funded your trust, your successor trustee should have little or no trouble stepping in to manage the accounts and property if you are unable to do so. This can be incredibly important if you are incapacitated and action must be taken right away. Your successor trustee may need to provide third parties with documentation proving their authority to act on behalf of the trust, but we can easily prepare this documentation for you without court involvement.

  • Creating the inventory for your trustee. One of the first things your successor trustee must provide your named beneficiaries at your passing is a comprehensive inventory of all the trust’s accounts and property. If the information gathered during the funding process is kept up to date, you will leave behind a helpful preliminary list for your trustee to use. This can save the successor trustee a lot of time in the beginning stages of administration.

  • Confidence that your plan will be carried out. If an account or piece of property is not owned by the trust, the instructions in the trust agreement will not matter. If the item is not controlled by a beneficiary designation or joint ownership, it will go through the probate process. At best, the property will be funded into the trust through a pour-over will. If a beneficiary has been named on an account or piece of property, it does not matter what your trust agreement says, it will go to whomever is listed on the beneficiary designation. The same is true with joint tenancy. Joint tenancy means that the other owner will automatically receive 100% of the interest in the account or property upon your death.

Working Together Now for Future Success

You obviously care deeply for your loved ones. Otherwise, you would not have taken the time to create an estate plan. The last step you need to take is to fund the trust. Please give us a call if you have any questions about the process. We are available, via telephone call or video conference if you prefer, to assist you in any way you may need. If you would like, we are also available to do the trust funding for you. Work with your estate planning attorney to make sure that your hard work will set up you and your loved ones for a successful future.

Need Legal Assistance?

If you have questions about probate law or need legal guidance, our experienced team is here to help.

Related Articles

Continue exploring our insights on estate planning and probate law

Featured image for Missouri Probate: What Happens If an Heir Refuses to Sign Papers? - Estate Planning legal guide from Schnurbusch Law

Missouri Probate: What Happens If an Heir Refuses to Sign Papers?

August 25, 2025

If an heir refuses to sign probate papers in Missouri, the estate must go through supervised probate—meaning greater court involvement, more paperwork, and increased costs and delays. Learn how consent affects probate administration, what happens when cooperation breaks down, and how both executors and heirs can protect their interests during the Missouri probate process.

Read more
Featured image for Electronic Wills and Estate Planning in Missouri - Missouri probate and estate planning legal guide

Electronic Wills and Estate Planning in Missouri

July 17, 2025

Missouri’s new Electronic Wills Act, effective August 2025, allows residents to create, sign, and store wills entirely online with the same legal validity as traditional paper documents. This groundbreaking law offers greater accessibility, convenience, and security for estate planning across the state, transforming how Missourians prepare for the future. Learn what the law entails, how to execute your electronic will, and why consulting a probate attorney remains essential.

Read more
Featured image for Understanding Missouri’s Probate Allowances: Protecting Spouses and Children - Probate legal guide from Schnurbusch Law

Understanding Missouri’s Probate Allowances: Protecting Spouses and Children

July 14, 2025

Navigating the probate process in Missouri can be overwhelming, especially when ensuring financial protections for surviving spouses and minor children. In this comprehensive guide, we break down the essential statutory allowances available—homestead allowance, exempt property allowance, and annual support allowance. Learn who can claim these benefits, how they work, and the latest legal updates impacting your rights. Secure your family’s financial stability during difficult times with insights into each allowance’s amount, claiming procedure, and the critical payment hierarchy within probate.

Read more