What revocable living trust means

A revocable living trust is the most common estate planning tool used in California. The grantor (the person creating the trust) transfers assets into the trust during their lifetime, retaining the ability to change, amend, or revoke the trust at any time. Because the grantor typically serves as their own trustee during their lifetime, they continue to manage and benefit from the trust assets just as they did before funding the trust. From a practical standpoint, a revocable trust often feels invisible during the grantor's lifetime.

The primary advantage over a simple will is that a properly funded revocable trust allows estate assets to pass to beneficiaries without going through California probate. Probate is a court-supervised process that can take one to three years and cost 2% to 4% of the gross estate in attorney and executor fees. A funded trust bypasses probate entirely, allowing the successor trustee to administer and distribute assets according to the trust document, typically within a few months of the grantor's death.

The trust also provides continuity during incapacity. If the grantor becomes unable to manage their own affairs, the successor trustee named in the document steps in automatically, without the need for a court-appointed conservator. This is one of the most overlooked but practical benefits of the revocable living trust structure, particularly as California's population ages and cognitive decline becomes a more common planning concern.

Why it matters for trust and probate loans

When the grantor of a revocable living trust dies, the trust typically becomes irrevocable and the irrevocable trust rules apply going forward. The successor trustee steps in. That is the most common entry point for a California trust loan. The successor trustee may find that the trust holds real estate but lacks the cash needed to pay debts, equalize distributions among beneficiaries, or fund improvements before a sale.

A trust loan from North Coast Financial gives the successor trustee a fast, practical solution. The loan is secured by the trust's real property and does not require the successor trustee to sell assets prematurely. The lender reviews the trust certification to confirm the trustee's identity and borrowing authority. Rates run from 9.5% to 10.95% with origination of 1.25 to 1.95 points, and most loans close in 8 to 14 business days. There is no prepayment penalty, no appraisal fee, and no lender document fees.

Related terms

See also: Irrevocable trust, Trust certification, and our main article on trust loans in California.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does a revocable living trust avoid estate taxes?
No. A revocable living trust does not reduce federal estate taxes because the grantor retains control over the assets during their lifetime. The trust assets are included in the grantor's taxable estate at death. The primary benefits of a revocable trust are probate avoidance, incapacity planning, and privacy. Irrevocable trusts, by contrast, may remove assets from the taxable estate under certain conditions. An estate planning attorney can evaluate whether your estate is large enough for estate tax planning to be relevant.
What happens to a revocable trust when the grantor dies?
At the grantor's death, the trust becomes irrevocable. The successor trustee named in the trust document takes over management. The trustee then follows the trust's distribution instructions, which may include paying debts, distributing specific assets to named beneficiaries, holding assets in ongoing sub-trusts for minor children, or other directives. Unlike probate, this process happens outside the court system and can usually be completed within months rather than years.
Can a bank or mortgage lender lend to a revocable living trust?
While the grantor is alive and the trust is still revocable, many conventional lenders will treat the loan as a personal loan to the grantor and allow the property to be held in the trust. After the grantor's death, the trust is irrevocable and conventional lenders typically will not lend to it. That is where specialty private money lenders like North Coast Financial step in, offering trust loans specifically designed for post-death trust administration.