Individuals & Families
Entrust your legacy with Premier Trust
progressive laws to benefit you
Who will be your Successor Trustee?
Who will step into your shoes and manage your affairs if you become incapacitated or pass away? Appointing an independent corporate trustee such as Premier Trust helps alleviate the immense responsibilities and duties that come with being a trustee.
Advantages of a Corporate Trustee
Our model allows us to maintain the legacy you built utilizing your team of professionals for many generations. Premier Trust employs dedicated professionals who have the professional knowledge, expertise, and resources to handle the complexities of trust administration. Regulated and monitored by state and federal government agencies, we operate without bias and ensure that accurate statements and reports meet regulatory and beneficiary requirements.
progressive laws to benefit you
Why Nevada?
Premier Trust is based in Nevada, allowing our clients across the country to design and execute their estate plans to take advantage of Nevada’s progressive trust, corporate, and tax laws. You can reside anywhere in the United States and still benefit from a fiduciary relationship with Premier Trust.
Already have an existing trust?
You can appoint Premier Trust as a replacement for your existing trustee and ensure the peace of mind that comes with hiring a professional trustee that has been in business since 2001.
Fee Schedule
Personal Trusts - Continual Administration | Annual Fee (Minimum Fee $3,000) |
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First $1 million | 0.60% |
$1-$2 million | 0.50% |
$2-$5 million | 0.35% |
Over $5 million | Contact Us |
**Additional fees may be added depending on asset structure or duties
Trust Settlements | One Time Fee |
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Outright Distribution - Fair market value of assets distributed | 2% |
Continual Administration - Fair market value of trust assets | 1% |
**Additional fees may be added depending on asset structure or duties
Special Needs Trusts & Guardianship | Annual Fee (Minimum Fee $4,000) |
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First $1 million | 0.85% |
$1-$2 million | 0.75% |
$2-$5 million | 0.65% |
Over $5 million | 0.25% |
**Additional fees may be added depending on asset structure or duties
Flat Fees
Asset Protection Trusts - Directed | Annual Fee |
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Administrative Trustee | $3,000 |
Distribution Discretion | $100 |
**Additional fees may be added depending on asset structure or duties
Irrevocable Life Insurance Trusts | Annual Fee |
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Irrevocable Life Insurance Trusts | $2,000 |
Additional Policies | $50/policy |
**Additional fees may be added depending on asset structure or duties
Resources
Online Portal
Get information about your trust and transactions 24/7. Clients receive access to their accounts and any related transactions through an online portal and electronic statements.
Already a client?
Frequently Asked Questions
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A trust is a business contract involving three parties. A trust requires a grantor (the creator), individual trustees, and a beneficiary.
In establishing a trust, a grantor must answer the question “For whom am I responsible?” The answer may include the client’s spouse, children, business partners, parents, a special needs child, or charities, to name a few.
The main benefit of an estate plan utilizing a trust is that the trustee will administer the assets of the trust in accordance with the grantor’s specific wishes, goals, and objectives as stated in the trust document. This will assure the orderly disposition of the client’s assets to achieve the outcome the client desires, limited only by the imagination of the grantor at the time the document is drafted.
Trusts can be revocable or irrevocable, the former being changeable by the grantor during the grantor’s lifetime and becoming irrevocable at the grantor’s death.
Revocable Nevada trusts set the stage for the disposition of assets similar to a will, however, they generally avoid probate administration and the costs associated with it. To gain this advantage, be sure that assets are retitled into the name of the revocable trust after it is established.
Irrevocable Nevada trusts generally are not readily changeable and are used to accomplish specific goals in estate and financial planning. They may contain provisions that instruct the trustee to distribute assets outright to beneficiaries at specific ages or to retain assets in trust for multiple generations. The latter “dynasty” provisions keep assets in trust for as long as permitted by state law, commonly referred to as “the rule against perpetuities.”
Generally, assets placed in an irrevocable trust are transferred outside of the grantor’s estate for estate and transfer tax purposes. An example is an Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust (ILIT) used to hold life insurance and collect proceeds outside of the client’s estate.
Asset Protection Trusts (APTs) are also irrevocable trusts, however, the assets they contain are considered held in the grantor’s estate and are taxed upon the grantor’s demise.
A special note: the grantor of a trust is held to a higher degree of competency than if he or she was simply creating a will.
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When clients formulate their estate plan or update an existing plan, one of the most important decisions they must make is who will be the trustee. Will they appoint a family member, a friend, or an Individual Corporate Trustees, such as Premier Trust.
The Most Important Factors One Should Consider:
Nevada trusts are complex legal documents with major tax and family implications – Individual Corporate Trustees have professional knowledge and expertise in handling the complexities of trust administration.
Trust administration is time consuming and can be complex – Corporate Trustees employ dedicated professionals who have the experience and resources to manage the details of complex trusts.
Nevada trusts administration requires very specific financial reporting – Corporate trustees have the financial and operational systems to provide timely accurate statements and reports to meet regulatory and beneficiary requirements.
Nevada trusts may continue for many generations – Corporate Trustees have a perpetual life. They will not die, become incompetent or go through distracting personal issues, all of which can happen to an individual family member or a friend who may be named as trustee.
Trust administration demands a high level of fiduciary responsibility and confidentiality – Corporate Trustees are regulated and monitored by state or federal government agencies and are held to a much higher standard than that of individual trustees.
Dealing with the distribution of trust assets to beneficiaries can be emotional – Individual Corporate Trustees do not have the personal biases that a family member or a friend may have toward one or more beneficiaries. Corporate Trustees are not affected by emotions and personal agendas. Their job is to follow the client’s instructions objectively and faithfully.
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The complexity of some Nevada trusts has fostered many myths and mysteries, many arising from misinformed media portrayal and a general misunderstanding of Nevada trusts work. Following is a short list of some of the most common myths and mysteries.
Myth #1: Trusts are only for the rich.
This is categorically incorrect. Trusts are not only for the rich. They are the framework providing for the security and wellbeing of one’s heirs. Trusts may protect an inheritance from an heir’s creditors, including in certain states, a divorcing spouse. Divorce and creditor protection are not benefits limited to the rich. You need not be wealthy to benefit by a trust.
Myth #2: Trusts are used to hide money or avoid income taxes.
Again, this is categorically incorrect. Nevada trusts are generally reporting entities to the IRS and other taxing authorities and they are not used to hide money from the authorities. Trusts pay taxes.
Myth #3: Trusts create “trust babies.”
Generally, trust assets are finite and beneficiaries do not have unlimited resources. The media portrays beneficiaries as trust babies, heirs that are “loafers” who enjoy the high life, living off the trust assets. Modern trust documents often require that beneficiaries meet certain qualifications to receive a distribution, such as being currently employed. This misconception is similar to the “reading of the will” often dramatized in movies and television; this simply does not happen in normal life.
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You’ll benefit from the Nevada Advantage. Typically, if a state has a personal income tax they probably also have a fiduciary state income tax. Nevada has neither tax, and this helps reduce the erosion of trust assets by the tax rate. The trust will always have to file a federal income tax return, but using a Nevada situs trustee will usually avoid any need to file a state fiduciary income tax return. However, if a beneficiary of a Nevada trust receives a trust distribution, that may subject that individual to their own state’s personal income tax filings.
Nevada Dynasty trust laws – In Nevada a trust can last 365 years. This may allow a trust to avoid the estate tax arena for multiple generations. Dynasty trusts are how wealth is accumulated by allowing trust assets to grow and compound within the trust fee of estate taxes that normally would be levied at the death of each generation.
One of the reasons it’s called the Nevada Advantage is because Nevada is considered one of the best state jurisdictions for domestic asset protection.
Nevada laws now permit the decanting of an irrevocable trust. Many clients do not like to use irrevocable trusts as they feel the document can never be changed. However, Nevada laws are very flexible and allows this ability to decant a current trust to another new trust, should circumstances change to warrant the prior trust to be disregarded.
Nevada allows directed trusts. This provides for the duties within the administration of the trust to be separated to have the trustee perform administrative functions and an outside investment adviser to manage the trust portfolio. Many clients like the idea of splitting these duties so one entity does not control all aspects of their estate plan.
Premier Trust was created as a directed trustee since we began in 2001. We are not attorneys, CPA’s or investment managers, so the client can be assured that as a trustee, we will keep their trusted advisors in place after they have passed.
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Premier Trust is chartered and incorporated in Nevada. It is under state law that we are authorized to act as a trust company. Clients nationwide are able to take advantage of the Nevada statutes by working with us.
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No.
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Yes. Nevada has no state personal or fiduciary income tax or capital gains tax for irrevocable trusts. Also, Nevada offers strong client asset-protection and limited liability company laws.
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Premier Trust requires a copy of the trust document for review prior to accepting any trusteeship. Additionally, we may need verification of identity and confirmation of certain documents and disclosures depending on the type of trust and our intended role. This may include:
W-9 Form – Completed by the “grantor(s)” and any current beneficiary(ies)
PIF (Personal Information Form) – One form must be completed and signed by each; Grantor, Family Trustee, Co-trustee, Trust Protector or Distribution Trustee. Form must also be notarized and returned to Premier Trust in an original form.
Copy of driver’s license or government ID for each of the above.
Copies of all Trust Documents (ie Trusts, Applicable amendments)
Contact Information for anyone listed in the trust (ie trustee(s), co-trustee(s))
You can upload a copy of the trust here.