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Trusts Explained: Why Giving Up Control Protects You
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Trusts Explained: Why Giving Up Control Protects You

Robert Ashford

Robert Ashford

Wealth Strategist & Author

June 5, 2026
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A will is for after you're gone. A trust is for while you're alive β€” and being sued. The difference between the two kinds of trust is the whole game. Here it is, plainly.

# Trusts Explained: Why Giving Up Control Protects You

Before you chase a fancy structure, learn the one thing nobody told you about trusts: protection and control don't come together. You pick one.

The wound is thinking any trust shields you. It doesn't. A revocable trust β€” the common one β€” keeps you in full control, helps your family skip probate, and is great for passing things smoothly. But because you can still pull the assets back, a creditor or a lawsuit can too. No real shield.

The mechanism is the irrevocable trust. You transfer assets to a trustee and give up ownership. You no longer own it, so a future creditor generally can't reach it. Roughly 20 states even allow a domestic asset protection trust, where you stay a beneficiary yet still get the shield.

The catch β€” and it's a real one. Irrevocable means you've let go of control. Federal bankruptcy rules can override state protection, courts argue over which state's law applies, and moving assets after a claim already exists is a fraudulent transfer β€” not protection.

It's written into the code. You just have to give something up to use it.

*Educational only β€” not tax, legal, or financial advice.*
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