A revocable living trust is the most useful estate planning tool for many Edmond families, and one of the most disappointing when it isn't done right. The disappointment almost never comes from the document itself. It comes from how the trust gets used, or, more often, doesn't get used. The single most common problem we see is a trust signed years ago, looking fine on paper, that was never actually funded. When the time comes, the family ends up in Oklahoma County probate court anyway.
A trust that's done right is different. It quietly absorbs your Edmond home, your accounts, your business interests, and the rest of what you own. It gives you continuity if you become incapacitated. It allows your successor trustee to manage and distribute everything without involving Oklahoma County District Court. It keeps your affairs private. And it provides built-in protection for the people you leave behind.
Why Edmond clients choose a trust
- Avoiding Oklahoma County probate. Probate is workable but slow and public. A funded trust skips it almost entirely.
- Privacy. Wills become public record once filed for probate. Trusts don't. For Edmond residents in tighter-knit neighborhoods, this matters.
- Multi-county or multi-state real estate. Edmond residents who also own a lake house or out-of-state property benefit from a trust that holds it all in one place.
- Continuity if you become incapacitated. Successor trustee steps in quietly. No guardianship petition.
- Blended families. A trust can hold a deceased spouse's share for the surviving spouse's benefit during life and pass cleanly to children from a prior marriage.
- Beneficiary protection. Inheritance held in trust for a child instead of distributed outright provides protection from creditors, divorce, poor decisions, and bad timing.
- Business interests. A trust can hold LLC interests and stock with clear succession, often paired with operating agreement provisions.
The Edmond funding step
Funding is the part that determines whether the trust delivers. For Edmond clients, funding generally involves:
- Re-deeding your Edmond home from you individually to you as trustee, with the new deed recorded at the Oklahoma County Clerk. Out-of-county property is recorded with the appropriate county clerk.
- Re-titling bank and brokerage accounts. Each institution has its own paperwork and procedures.
- Updating beneficiary designations on retirement accounts and life insurance, with the trust named where appropriate.
- Addressing LLC and partnership interests through assignment documents and operating agreement updates.
Trust packages we typically draft for Edmond clients
- Revocable living trust (joint or individual)
- Pour-over will catching anything not funded into the trust
- Durable power of attorney for finances
- Health care power of attorney
- Advance directive
- HIPAA authorization
- Guardianship nomination for minor children, where applicable
- Funding instructions and assistance