Everything you need to know about living trusts in plain English
By Rozsa Gyene, estate planning Attorney | State Bar #208356
A living trust is a legal document that holds your assets (home, accounts, property) during your lifetime and automatically transfers them to your beneficiaries when you die — without going through probate court. You maintain complete control while alive. When you die, assets transfer directly to your family in weeks instead of months, and save them $27,000-$68,000+ in probate costs.
A living trust (also called a "revocable living trust") is a legal arrangement where you transfer ownership of your assets to a trust that you control. Think of it like a box that holds all your valuable possessions:
The key benefit: Assets in a trust don't go through probate. They transfer directly to your beneficiaries according to your instructions.
Create your California living trust online in 30 minutes. Save $27,000+ in probate costs and avoid 12-18 months of court delays.
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A California living trust does three important things:
When you die with just a will, your estate must go through probate court. California probate costs 4-7% of your estate value and takes 12-18 months. For a typical $700,000 California home, probate costs your family $38,000-$68,000.
A living trust bypasses probate entirely. Assets transfer to your beneficiaries in 2-4 weeks with no court involvement and no probate fees.
If you become unable to manage your affairs (dementia, stroke, serious illness), your successor trustee can immediately step in and manage your assets without court intervention.
Without a trust, your family would need to go to court to get a conservatorship, which costs $5,000-$10,000 and takes months.
Probate is public record. Anyone can look up what you owned and who inherited it. A living trust remains private — nobody's business except your family.
California families lose $27,000+ to probate every day. Create your living trust now and protect your loved ones.
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Here's how a living trust works step-by-step:
You create a trust document that specifies:
You retitle your assets in the name of the trust:
Nothing changes in your daily life. You still:
The trust is "revocable," meaning you can change it or cancel it anytime.
When you die:
Sarah Martinez, 65, widowed, has:
Sarah creates a living trust:
While Sarah is alive: Nothing changes. She lives in her home, uses her accounts, has complete control.
When Sarah dies: Maria (successor trustee) transfers the home and accounts to Sarah's two children per the trust instructions. Process takes 3 weeks. No probate. No $38,000+ in probate fees. Private.
If Sarah had only a will: Estate would go through probate, cost $38,000-$68,000, take 12-18 months, be public record.
The main difference: A will goes through probate. A living trust does not.
Note: You should have both. Create a living trust for your main assets, plus a "pour-over will" to catch anything you forgot to put in the trust.
You need a living trust if you:
If you own a California home, you almost certainly need a living trust.
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You have three options:
Create your California living trust online in 30 minutes. Attorney-prepared and reviewed. Starting at $150.
A living trust is a legal document that holds ownership of your assets (home, bank accounts, investments) during your lifetime and automatically transfers them to your beneficiaries when you die without going through probate court. You maintain complete control as the trustee while alive, and your successor trustee distributes assets according to your instructions when you die. The key benefit is avoiding California's expensive and time-consuming probate process.
When you transfer assets into a living trust, they are no longer in your individual name — they're owned by the trust. Since probate only applies to assets owned in your name at death, trust assets bypass probate entirely. Your successor trustee can immediately distribute them to beneficiaries according to your trust instructions, taking 2-4 weeks instead of 12-18 months and saving $27,000-$68,000+ in probate costs.
A will takes effect only when you die and must go through probate court (12-18 months, $27,000-$68,000+ in fees, public record). A living trust takes effect immediately when you create it, avoids probate court (2-4 weeks, minimal fees, private), and also protects you if you become incapacitated. You should have both — a living trust for your main assets plus a pour-over will to catch anything you forgot to put in the trust.
You need a living trust if you own a home in California, have assets over $208,000, want to avoid $27,000-$68,000+ in probate costs, want your family to inherit quickly (weeks not months), value privacy, have minor children, or want incapacity protection. California homeowners almost always benefit from a living trust due to high real estate values and California's expensive probate fees.
Cost varies by method: Online services with attorney review cost $150-$400 and take 24-48 hours. Traditional attorneys charge $1,500-$5,000 and take 2-4 weeks. DIY templates cost $0-$50 but are risky for California homeowners and may not comply with current California law. For most California families, online services with attorney review offer the best value — professional quality at 80% savings.
About: Rozsa Gyene, California Estate Planning Attorney, State Bar #208356, 25+ years experience.
© 2025 Living Trust California. Rozsa Gyene, Attorney at Law, State Bar #208356.
Attorney Rozsa Gyene reviews every trust personally. Professional estate planning for just $400-$500 — delivered in 24-48 hours. Avoid probate and protect your family.
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Legal Review By
California State Bar #208356 | Licensed Since 2000
25+ years estate planning experience in California
Probate timelines and fees vary dramatically by jurisdiction. A living trust protects your family regardless of which county your property is in:
Information verified by Rozsa Gyene, Esq. (CA Bar #208356) for 2025 statutory compliance.