-
-
Recent Posts
Request A Consultation
It depends on several factors. Once you transfer assets into an irrevocable trust and give up ownership and control, your creditors generally can’t reach them. However, there are important exceptions. If you created the trust to avoid paying existing creditors, courts can treat this as a fraudulent transfer. The timing of when you established the trust, what type of irrevocable trust you’re using, and whether you retained any beneficial interest all affect creditor protection.
At Carpenter & Lewis PLLC, we’ve helped families understand asset protection strategies for over thirty years.
Once you put assets into an irrevocable trust, you’re giving up ownership and control. You can’t take the assets back whenever you want. Because you no longer own those assets, your creditors generally can’t reach them either. That’s the fundamental trade-off with irrevocable trusts.
Yes, they can. If you create an irrevocable trust specifically to avoid paying existing creditors, that’s a problem. Courts call this a fraudulent transfer. For example, if you get sued and then immediately move all your assets into an irrevocable trust, that won’t protect you. Under Tennessee law, creditors can challenge transfers made with the intent to defraud them.
Timing matters enormously. If you had debts or knew a lawsuit was coming when you created the trust, a court might allow creditors to go after those assets anyway.
Self-settled trusts are irrevocable trusts where you created the trust for your own benefit. Maybe you’re still receiving income from the trust or can access the principal under certain conditions. If you retain any beneficial interest, creditors often can reach whatever interest you kept.
Tennessee doesn’t have particularly strong self-settled trust protections compared to some other states. If you want maximum creditor protection, you typically need to give up all rights to the trust assets. Our Maryville trust lawyer can explain how much control you can safely retain.
It depends on how the trust is structured. A well-drafted irrevocable trust includes what’s called a spendthrift clause. According to Tennessee Code, spendthrift provisions can protect trust assets from beneficiaries’ creditors in most situations.
With a spendthrift trust, beneficiaries can’t sell or assign their interest, and creditors can’t attach it either. The trustee has discretion over distributions, which means creditors can’t force the trustee to hand over trust funds to satisfy a beneficiary’s debts.
Even spendthrift clauses have limits. Common exceptions include:
These exceptions vary by state, so understanding Tennessee’s specific rules matters.
Yes, this matters a lot. Some irrevocable trusts are still considered “grantor trusts” for tax purposes. This happens when you retain certain powers over the trust, like the ability to substitute assets or control investments.
If the IRS treats it as a grantor trust for taxes, courts might decide your creditors can reach those assets too. The trust isn’t truly separate from you if you’re still paying taxes on its income. This creates a situation where you get the worst of both worlds: you’ve given up control but creditors might still reach the assets.
Some states, like Nevada and Delaware, have specific asset protection trust statutes that offer stronger protection than Tennessee provides. These states allow self-settled trusts with better creditor protections.
If asset protection is your primary goal, it might be worth considering an out-of-state trust. But these come with their own complications and costs. You’ll need trustees in those states, pay fees there, and navigate their specific requirements.
They can, but you need to plan ahead. Medicaid has a five-year lookback period. If you transfer assets to an irrevocable trust within five years of applying for benefits, you’ll face penalties and potential disqualification from coverage.
After the lookback period passes, properly structured irrevocable trusts can protect assets from Medicaid estate recovery while still potentially providing some income to your spouse or family members. The trust structure needs to be exactly right for this to work.
Creating an irrevocable trust probably won’t help if you already owe money. Courts can and will unwind fraudulent transfers. You need to plan before problems arise, not after.
The best time to create asset protection strategies is when you don’t have creditor issues. Planning ahead means you’re making legitimate estate planning decisions, not trying to dodge existing debts.
Small mistakes can eliminate the creditor protection you’re trying to create. Common problems include:
Our Maryville trust lawyer can help you avoid these pitfalls.
Irrevocable trusts can provide strong asset protection, but they’re not magic shields that work in every situation. The timing of when you create the trust, how it’s structured, and what powers you retain all affect whether creditors can reach the assets.
If asset protection matters to you, contact Carpenter & Lewis PLLC to discuss whether an irrevocable trust makes sense for your situation and how to structure it for maximum protection
10413 Kingston Pike, Suite 200 Knoxville, Tennessee 37922
Also Serving: Farragut TN
New Clients: (865) 509-9600
Existing Clients: (865) 690-4997
Facsimile: (865) 690-4790