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Christopher R. Hibbard, ChFC®, CRPC®, CFS®

Vice President, Wealth Management

 

Teachers Investment Services

Located at Teachers Federal Credit Union

5439 Sunrise Highway

Holbrook, NY 11741

 

Phone:  631-698-7000 Ext. 6020

 

Email: christopher.hibbard@lpl.com

 

CRPC conferred by College for Financial Planning.

May/June 2025

Do You Need a Trust?

Young parent working from home while holding his baby boy on his lap while they both watch to the screen.

While trusts are often complex, they offer high net worth families and individuals tax advantages and more control over how their assets are distributed to future generations. One of the more common and effective trusts used to accomplish these twin goals is an AB trust, which is also known as a credit shelter or bypass trust. This type of trust begins as a revocable trust, when you can make changes, and ends as an irrevocable trust.


When families and individuals want to retain some control over how their assets are distributed after they're gone while limiting the corrosive effect of estate taxes, any one of a variety of irrevocable trusts can accomplish this. Irrevocable trusts also shield assets named in these trusts from the public glare of probate court, while dictating how your estate will provide for your family going forward.


Multiple Advantages
How does this trust work? Part A of the trust provides income to the surviving spouse. When the second spouse dies, Part B kicks in for the benefit of the second spouse's estate and becomes irrevocable. By dividing asset ownership among both spouses, the trust ensures the couple receives the maximum federal estate tax exemption, or credit. This is key because a couple can lose part of one spouse's exemption if they haven't used it all.


While the estate can allow the surviving spouse to use the deceased spouse's remaining exemption, it has some limits.


The AB trust provides more control, but it doesn't apply to the generation-skipping transfer tax exemption and isn't recognized by some states.


An AB Trust can offer control, maximize tax credits and help ensure that assets pass to beneficiaries as intended. If you want to leave financial means to a spouse after your death while also ensuring other beneficiaries ultimately receive the remainder of tax-advantaged assets, the AB trust is one way to achieve this.


Consult an estate planning attorney and your tax and financial professionals to learn if this type of trust is appropriate for your situation.


An AB trust is a dual-purpose vehicle that can allow you to provide income to a surviving spouse while eventually passing on tax-advantaged assets to beneficiaries.

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Christopher Hibbard is a financial advisor with, and securities and advisory services are offered through LPL Financial (LPL), a registered investment advisor and broker-dealer (member FINRA/SIPC). Insurance products are offered through LPL or its licensed affiliates. Teachers Federal Credit Union (TFCU) and Teachers Investment Services are not registered as a broker/dealer or investment advisor. Registered representatives of LPL offer products and services using Teachers Investment Services, and may also be employees of TFCU. These products and services are being offered through LPL or its affiliates, which are separate entities from and not affiliates of, TFCU or Teachers Investment Services. Securities and insurance offered through LPL or its affiliates are:

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