Living Trust California

California Trust Types Explained

Revocable vs Irrevocable Trust California: Complete Guide

The choice between a revocable and irrevocable trust has major implications for control, taxes, and asset protection. Here's what California families need to know.

Revocable vs irrevocable trust—which is right for your California estate plan? The choice has major implications for control, taxes, and asset protection. This guide explains the key differences and helps you determine which type of trust fits your needs. Spoiler: Most Californians need a revocable living trust.

Quick Answer: If your primary goal is avoiding probate while maintaining control of your assets, you need a revocable living trust. Irrevocable trusts are specialized tools for Medicaid planning, estate tax reduction, or asset protection.

What is a Revocable Living Trust?

A revocable living trust is the most common type of trust for California families. "Revocable" means you can change, amend, or completely cancel the trust at any time during your lifetime. You maintain full control.

Key Features of Revocable Trusts:

What is an Irrevocable Trust?

An irrevocable trust cannot be changed or cancelled without the consent of beneficiaries (and sometimes court approval). Once you transfer assets to an irrevocable trust, you've given them away—they're no longer "yours."

Key Features of Irrevocable Trusts:

Revocable vs Irrevocable Trust: Key Differences

Feature Revocable Trust Irrevocable Trust
Can you change it? Yes, anytime No (or very difficult)
Who owns assets? You (grantor) Trust owns them
Avoids probate? Yes Yes
Creditor protection? No Yes
Estate tax benefits? No Yes
Medi-Cal planning? No Yes (with planning)
Control Full control Give up control
Tax filing Your personal return Separate trust return

Tax Implications of Each Trust Type

Understanding the tax differences between revocable and irrevocable trusts is crucial for making an informed decision. The tax treatment differs significantly during your lifetime and after death.

Revocable Trust Tax Treatment:

A revocable living trust is considered a "grantor trust" for tax purposes. This means the IRS ignores the trust—you're treated as if you still own the assets directly.

Irrevocable Trust Tax Treatment:

An irrevocable trust is a separate legal entity with its own tax obligations. Because you've given up control, the assets are no longer "yours" for tax purposes.

Important: California has no state estate tax, but the federal estate tax exemption is $13.61 million (2024). Unless your estate exceeds this threshold, irrevocable trusts provide NO estate tax benefit. For most Californians, the tax complexity of an irrevocable trust isn't worth it.

Medi-Cal Planning and Irrevocable Trusts

One of the most common reasons Californians consider irrevocable trusts is Medi-Cal planning—protecting assets while qualifying for government-funded long-term care.

How Medi-Cal Asset Protection Works:

Medi-Cal (California's Medicaid program) has strict asset limits for eligibility. As of 2024, a single individual can only have about $2,000 in countable assets to qualify. However, assets transferred to an irrevocable trust may not count toward this limit—with important caveats.

The 30-Month Look-Back Period:

Critical Warning: Medi-Cal planning with irrevocable trusts is highly complex and state-specific. Improper planning can disqualify you from benefits or result in estate recovery claims. This type of planning requires an elder law attorney—not DIY or generic online services.

Can You Convert a Revocable Trust to Irrevocable?

Yes, a revocable trust can become irrevocable, but the circumstances matter:

Automatic Conversion at Death:

Every revocable trust automatically becomes irrevocable when the grantor (creator) dies. At that point, the terms are locked and beneficiaries cannot change them. This is normal and expected.

Voluntary Conversion During Life:

You can intentionally convert a revocable trust to irrevocable by:

Caution: Voluntarily making a trust irrevocable is a major decision with significant tax and legal consequences. You give up control of the assets permanently. This should only be done with professional guidance for specific goals like Medi-Cal planning or estate tax reduction.

Which Trust Type for Prop 19 Benefits?

California's Proposition 19 (effective February 2021) significantly changed property tax rules for inherited properties. Understanding how trust type affects Prop 19 is crucial for California families.

Prop 19 and Revocable Trusts:

A revocable living trust preserves Prop 19 parent-child exclusion benefits when properly structured. The property passes to children at the parent's assessed value (with limitations) rather than being reassessed at current market value.

Prop 19 and Irrevocable Trusts:

Transfers to irrevocable trusts during life may trigger immediate reassessment because you're giving up ownership. The parent-child exclusion under Prop 19 requires the transfer to occur at death, not during life.

Key Prop 19 Limitations (Both Trust Types):

Bottom Line: For most California families concerned about property tax, a revocable living trust is the appropriate choice. It preserves Prop 19 benefits while avoiding probate. Irrevocable trusts may actually harm your property tax situation if not structured correctly.

When to Choose a Revocable Trust

Most Californians should choose a revocable living trust. Here's why:

Choose Revocable If You:

When to Choose an Irrevocable Trust

Irrevocable trusts are specialized tools for specific situations:

Good Candidates:

  • Medicaid/Medi-Cal planning
  • Estates over $13 million
  • Asset protection needs
  • Special needs beneficiaries
  • Life insurance trusts (ILITs)
  • Charitable planning

NOT Needed If:

  • Estate under $13 million
  • Just want to avoid probate
  • Want flexibility and control
  • Don't need creditor protection
  • No Medi-Cal planning needs

Can You Have Both?

Yes, many estate plans include both types of trusts:

Note: A revocable trust automatically becomes irrevocable when you die. At that point, beneficiaries cannot change its terms.

Revocable vs Irrevocable Trust Cost in California

Cost Factor Revocable Trust Irrevocable Trust
Our Service $400 individual / $500 couples Not offered (requires custom drafting)
Traditional Attorney $1,500-$3,000 $2,000-$10,000+
Complexity Straightforward Complex, customized
Ongoing Costs None Annual trust tax returns

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: What is the main difference between revocable and irrevocable trusts?

A: A revocable trust can be changed or cancelled anytime during your lifetime—you maintain full control. An irrevocable trust cannot be changed without beneficiary consent—you give up control but may gain creditor protection and potential estate tax benefits.

Q: Which type of trust do most Californians need?

A: Revocable living trust. It avoids probate, maintains flexibility, and you keep full control of your assets. Irrevocable trusts are specialized tools only needed for Medi-Cal planning, estates over $13 million, or specific asset protection scenarios.

Q: Does a revocable trust protect assets from creditors?

A: No. Because you maintain control of a revocable trust, creditors can still reach those assets during your lifetime. Only irrevocable trusts provide creditor protection because you've given up ownership.

Q: Can I change a revocable trust to irrevocable?

A: A revocable trust automatically becomes irrevocable when you die. You can voluntarily convert during life by amending the trust, but this requires careful legal and tax planning. It's a permanent decision that shouldn't be made without professional guidance.

Q: Do I need an irrevocable trust for estate tax planning?

A: Only if your estate exceeds $13.61 million (2024 federal exemption). California has no state estate tax. Most Californians don't need irrevocable trusts for tax purposes—the complexity isn't worth it unless you're in this high-net-worth category.

Q: How does an irrevocable trust help with Medi-Cal?

A: Assets transferred to an irrevocable trust may not count toward Medi-Cal's asset limits for long-term care eligibility. However, California has a 30-month look-back period—transfers must occur at least 30 months before you apply. This requires careful advance planning with an elder law attorney.

Q: Which trust type is better for Prop 19 property tax benefits?

A: A revocable living trust preserves Prop 19 parent-child exclusion benefits. Transfers to irrevocable trusts during life may trigger immediate property tax reassessment. For most California families, a revocable trust is the better choice for property tax planning.

Q: How much does each type of trust cost?

A: Revocable living trusts cost $400-$500 through our service (or $1,500-$3,000 with traditional attorneys). Irrevocable trusts require custom legal drafting and typically cost $2,000-$10,000+ depending on complexity. We only offer revocable trusts because that's what most Californians need.

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Attorney Rozsa Gyene

Legal Review By

Rozsa Gyene, Esq.

California State Bar #208356 | Licensed Since 2000

25+ years estate planning experience in California