Session 2: Estate Planning for Digital Assets and Real Estate Trusts
Subtitle: Control, Access, and Transfer in Modern Portfolios
Overview
This session addresses two critical and often overlooked areas of planning: digital assets and real estate. Advisors will learn how to ensure access, control, and efficient transfer of both intangible and illiquid assets.
Part 1: Digital Assets
Key Topics
- Cryptocurrency and digital wallets
- Online businesses and monetized platforms
- Digital intellectual property
- Brokerage and fintech accounts
- Cloud-based business records
Planning Challenges
- Custodial access restrictions under RUFADAA
- Password management vs. legal authority
- Multisignature wallet structures
- Valuation and reporting issues
- Risk of lost or inaccessible keys
Strategic Solutions
- Digital asset memorandums
- Appointment of digital fiduciaries
- Titling strategies for cryptocurrency
- Centralized asset inventory systems
Planner Takeaway
Digital wealth requires operational planning in addition to legal documentation. Without coordination, these assets can be lost entirely.
Part 2: Trusts and Real Estate
Real estate is often a client’s largest asset and a major planning opportunity. This section focuses on practical trust strategies that improve protection, transfer efficiency, and tax outcomes.
Key Strategies
Revocable Living Trusts
- Probate avoidance and privacy
- Proper funding and titling
- When baseline planning is sufficient
Qualified Personal Residence Trusts (QPRTs)
- Discounted gift valuation using retained interests
- Term selection and mortality considerations
- When QPRTs are appropriate given interest rates and lifestyle factors
Spousal Lifetime Access Trusts (SLATs)
- Removing assets from the estate while preserving indirect access
- Avoiding reciprocal trust risks
- Planning for exemption uncertainty
LLC and Trust Structures
- Combining liability protection with estate planning
- Proper ownership structuring
- Common pitfalls including lender and state-specific issues
Practical Planning Alternatives
- Transfer-on-death strategies
- Basic irrevocable trusts
- Balancing complexity, cost, and client benefit
Planner Takeaway
Effective real estate planning requires coordination between ownership structure, tax strategy, and client objectives.
