Update Your California Living Trust

Amendments and restatements for life changes

Attorney-reviewed by Rozsa Gyene | CA State Bar #208356

Trust Amendment or Restatement

$150

Attorney-reviewed. California-specific. Properly formatted.

Request Your Update

Life changes. Your living trust should change with it. Whether you've gotten married, divorced, had children, bought property, or simply want to change your beneficiaries, we can help you update your trust quickly and affordably.

When Should You Update Your Living Trust?

Your living trust should be reviewed and potentially updated when:

💍 Marriage or Remarriage

Your new spouse likely needs to be added as beneficiary and possibly co-trustee. For blended families, you may need special provisions to protect both your spouse and children from prior relationships.

💔 Divorce

Remove your ex-spouse as beneficiary, trustee, and agent. California doesn't automatically revoke these designations after divorce. If you don't update, your ex could inherit or control your assets.

🕊️ Death of Beneficiary or Trustee

If a named beneficiary or successor trustee has passed away, update your trust to name alternates. Otherwise, the court may decide who receives assets or manages your trust.

👶 Birth or Adoption of Children

Add your new child as a beneficiary. You may also want to update guardian designations and consider provisions for when children should receive their inheritance.

🏠 Buying or Selling Property

New property should be transferred into your trust. If you've sold property, update the trust schedule. Property outside your trust goes through probate.

👥 Changing Beneficiaries

Want to add or remove beneficiaries? Change distribution percentages? Leave specific items to specific people? All require a trust amendment.

🔄 Changing Trustees

Need a new successor trustee? Your original choice is no longer appropriate? Update your trust to name someone you currently trust.

📅 It's Been 5+ Years

Even without major life changes, trusts should be reviewed every 5 years. Laws change. Your wishes may have evolved. A review ensures your trust still does what you want.

Amendment vs. Restatement: Which Do You Need?

Trust Amendment

A trust amendment changes specific provisions of your trust while keeping the rest intact. The amendment is attached to your original trust and both documents are read together.

Best for:

Trust Restatement

A complete restatement replaces your entire trust document with a new version. Importantly, it maintains the same trust (so you don't need to retransfer assets), but provides a clean, updated document.

Best for:

We'll Help You Choose

When you contact us for an update, we'll review your situation and recommend whether an amendment or restatement is more appropriate. The cost is the same either way: $150.

Cost Comparison

Provider Amendment Cost Notes
Living Trust California $150 Attorney-reviewed, one-time fee
Traditional Attorney $500-$1,500+ Hourly billing
LegalZoom $199/year Subscription required for updates
Trust & Will $19/month $228/year subscription

Unlike subscription services, our $150 fee is a one-time cost for each update. No annual fees. No ongoing subscriptions. You only pay when you actually need changes.

How Our Update Process Works

1

Contact Us

Reach out via our contact form or call (818) 291-6217. Tell us what changes you need and provide a copy of your current trust.

2

We Review & Prepare

Attorney Rozsa Gyene reviews your current trust and prepares the appropriate amendment or restatement. We ensure all changes are properly drafted under California law.

3

You Review & Pay

We send you the draft document for review. Once approved, you pay the $150 fee and receive your final documents.

4

Sign & Notarize

Sign your amendment or restatement in front of a notary. We provide instructions. If property changes are involved, we prepare new deeds.

What If I Need a New Trust Instead?

Sometimes updating isn't enough. You may need an entirely new trust if:

In these cases, we recommend our full California Living Trust Package ($400-$500) rather than an amendment.

Don't Wait Until It's Too Late

An outdated trust can cause significant problems. If your ex-spouse is still named as beneficiary, they could inherit everything. If your successor trustee has passed away, your family may face court proceedings. Update your trust while you're able to make changes.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I update a trust myself?

Technically yes, but we don't recommend it. Improperly drafted amendments can invalidate your trust or create unintended consequences. The $150 cost of professional preparation is worth the peace of mind.

Does my spouse need to sign the amendment?

If you have a joint trust, both spouses must sign amendments. If you have separate trusts, only the grantor of that trust signs.

Do I need to re-record my deed after an amendment?

Usually no. If your property is already in the trust's name, an amendment doesn't require re-recording. However, if you're adding new property, you'll need a new deed for that property.

How long does the update process take?

We typically prepare amendments within 3-5 business days. Complex restatements may take 5-7 days. Rush service is available if needed.

Do I need to notify my bank or other institutions?

Only if you're changing trustees. Banks and financial institutions should be notified if the person managing the trust changes. Beneficiary changes don't require notification during your lifetime.

Ready to Update Your Trust?

Don't let an outdated trust cause problems for your family. Get your amendment or restatement for just $150.

Request Your Update

Questions? Call (818) 291-6217

Don't Have a Trust Yet?

If you don't have a living trust and need to create one, check out our full California living trust package.

Create a new living trust for $400 →