Your Trusted Rhode Island Revocable Living Trust Lawyers
"You don’t need a 200-page binder to protect the people you love. You need a clear, well-built will and a team that handles the details. We’ll make it straightforward." Rhode Island Living Trust LawyersMost families don’t want their loved ones standing in line at the probate court, answering mailed notices, and waiting months for permission to do obvious things. A revocable living trust is the quiet alternative: it keeps your plan private, keeps your family out of probate for the assets you place in the trust, and lets a successor step in immediately if you’re ever unable to manage things yourself. If you’re looking for a seasoned Rhode Island revocable living trust attorney who will make this feel straightforward, you’re in the right place.
I’ll design the trust around your real life—people, property, and the “what-ifs” you actually worry about—then help you fund it so it works in the real world, not just on paper. Why families choose a living trustA will is a set of instructions to the Probate Court. A living trust is a set of instructions to your trustee. That small shift changes the experience for everyone you care about. With a funded trust, your chosen successor can pay bills, sell the house, manage investments, and carry out your wishes without waiting for court authority. The plan stays off the public record, which preserves dignity and reduces drama. If you own property in more than one state, the trust also prevents the headache of multiple probates. Just as important, a living trust is a powerful incapacity plan. If an accident or illness makes it hard for you to manage finances, the successor trustee steps in seamlessly, following the roadmap you wrote, while you continue to receive the benefit of your assets. No guardianship petitions. No frantic paperwork. Just continuity. What this package includes (in plain English)You’ll receive a carefully drafted Revocable Living Trust that controls how and when assets are used for you during life and distributed after. We pair it with a pour-over will (to catch anything that isn’t in the trust), durable financial power of attorney, health-care proxy/medical power of attorney, HIPAA authorization, and an advance directive. We prepare the deeds needed to move your Rhode Island or Massachusetts real estate into the trust, provide letters and forms for banks and custodians, and give you a simple funding checklist so account titles and beneficiary designations match the plan. Execution matters, so we supervise a proper signing. Organization matters, too: you leave with an indexed, easy-to-use set plus secure PDFs, and—most important—a clear list of the next few calls or clicks to finish funding. We stay with you through that last mile. |
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Answers to questions you may be asking?
What a trust can (and can’t) do
A revocable trust avoids probate for assets titled to it and keeps your plan private. It can smooth blended-family dynamics, protect young or vulnerable beneficiaries by staging distributions over time, and reduce the chances of conflict because the instructions are centralized and clear. It’s also flexible: you can amend or revoke it while you’re alive and competent.
It is not a magic shield. A standard revocable trust does not provide asset protection from your own creditors and does not reduce income taxes while you’re alive; it is your alter ego for tax and control purposes. If asset protection or Medicaid planning is a priority, we’ll talk about irrevocable options instead.
Funding: the part most firms gloss over (we don’t)
A trust only avoids probate for assets that are properly titled to it or pay to it at death. That means new deeds for real estate, updated titles or assignments where appropriate, and beneficiary designations that point to the trust when that’s the right move. We make funding a joint project: we handle the deeds and provide clear, detailed instructions (and, when needed, letters to institutions) so you can retitle accounts with confidence. If a financial institution needs to see trust provisions, we use a Certificate/Abstract of Trust that protects your privacy while satisfying their checklist.
Will vs. Living Trust: choosing the right lane
If you prefer court oversight, have a very simple asset picture, and don’t mind a public process, our Will Package is a clean solution. If you want privacy, faster access to funds, and fewer delays for the people you love—particularly a surviving spouse—this Revocable Trust Package is almost always the better choice. We’ll show you the trade-offs in plain English and recommend the lightest tool that truly serves your family.
How working together feels (start to finish)
We begin with a focused conversation about goals, people, property, and the “never agains” that drive your decisions. I sketch the design in human language first - who’s in charge, what happens while you’re living, what changes if you’re not, and how beneficiaries receive support without chaos. Drafts follow with brief summaries so you can review quickly. We edit together until the plan fits. After signing, we walk the last mile to fund the trust, because that is what separates a pretty binder from a plan that works.
Most families complete the process in three to six weeks. If life is moving faster, we can, too.
Fees (predictable and transparent)
Our Revocable Living Trust Package starts at $4,500 for an individual or a couple. That includes design, drafting, attorney-supervised execution, deed work for your primary residence, a funding roadmap for your institutions, and a follow-up to make sure funding stays on track. More complex plans - multiple properties, closely held businesses, detailed sub-trusts, or special-needs provisions - are priced in writing before we begin, so there are no surprises.
Common questions—quick, candid answers
Will my mortgage or homeowner’s insurance be a problem if I deed the house to the trust?
For revocable, “you-are-still-you” living trusts, lenders and carriers are accustomed to this; your occupancy and liability coverage remain the same. We coordinate any needed confirmations so you don’t hit snags.
Do retirement accounts go into the trust?
Generally, no - you keep ownership in your name but consider naming the trust as a beneficiary when you want timing, tax coordination, or protection for a minor or vulnerable beneficiary. We will outline options that fit your tax picture.
Can a revocable trust protect assets from nursing-home costs or lawsuits?
No. Revocable means changeable and fully controlled by you; creditors and agencies see through it. If protection is the goal, we’ll talk about irrevocable structures and the trade-offs involved.
What if I forget to move something into the trust?
Your pour-over will directs leftover probate assets into the trust at death. That safety net helps, but the goal is to fund now so you avoid probate altogether for the big-ticket items.
Does a trust help with out-of-state property?
Yes. Titling those properties to your trust avoids separate, out-of-state probates—an easy win for families with a vacation home or rental.
The outcome you should expect
You’ll finish with a private plan that keeps your family out of probate for the assets that matter, a clear path for incapacity so bills get paid and care continues, and practical instructions your trustee can follow without guesswork. More than anything, you’ll leave with relief - because the right person will be in charge, the process will be quieter, and the people you love won’t be left to figure it out in public.
If you’re ready to build the plan that makes life easier for your family, let’s start the conversation. We’ll confirm whether a Revocable Living Trust Package is the right fit - or whether a simpler Will Package meets your needs - and then we’ll make it easy to finish.
A revocable trust avoids probate for assets titled to it and keeps your plan private. It can smooth blended-family dynamics, protect young or vulnerable beneficiaries by staging distributions over time, and reduce the chances of conflict because the instructions are centralized and clear. It’s also flexible: you can amend or revoke it while you’re alive and competent.
It is not a magic shield. A standard revocable trust does not provide asset protection from your own creditors and does not reduce income taxes while you’re alive; it is your alter ego for tax and control purposes. If asset protection or Medicaid planning is a priority, we’ll talk about irrevocable options instead.
Funding: the part most firms gloss over (we don’t)
A trust only avoids probate for assets that are properly titled to it or pay to it at death. That means new deeds for real estate, updated titles or assignments where appropriate, and beneficiary designations that point to the trust when that’s the right move. We make funding a joint project: we handle the deeds and provide clear, detailed instructions (and, when needed, letters to institutions) so you can retitle accounts with confidence. If a financial institution needs to see trust provisions, we use a Certificate/Abstract of Trust that protects your privacy while satisfying their checklist.
Will vs. Living Trust: choosing the right lane
If you prefer court oversight, have a very simple asset picture, and don’t mind a public process, our Will Package is a clean solution. If you want privacy, faster access to funds, and fewer delays for the people you love—particularly a surviving spouse—this Revocable Trust Package is almost always the better choice. We’ll show you the trade-offs in plain English and recommend the lightest tool that truly serves your family.
How working together feels (start to finish)
We begin with a focused conversation about goals, people, property, and the “never agains” that drive your decisions. I sketch the design in human language first - who’s in charge, what happens while you’re living, what changes if you’re not, and how beneficiaries receive support without chaos. Drafts follow with brief summaries so you can review quickly. We edit together until the plan fits. After signing, we walk the last mile to fund the trust, because that is what separates a pretty binder from a plan that works.
Most families complete the process in three to six weeks. If life is moving faster, we can, too.
Fees (predictable and transparent)
Our Revocable Living Trust Package starts at $4,500 for an individual or a couple. That includes design, drafting, attorney-supervised execution, deed work for your primary residence, a funding roadmap for your institutions, and a follow-up to make sure funding stays on track. More complex plans - multiple properties, closely held businesses, detailed sub-trusts, or special-needs provisions - are priced in writing before we begin, so there are no surprises.
Common questions—quick, candid answers
Will my mortgage or homeowner’s insurance be a problem if I deed the house to the trust?
For revocable, “you-are-still-you” living trusts, lenders and carriers are accustomed to this; your occupancy and liability coverage remain the same. We coordinate any needed confirmations so you don’t hit snags.
Do retirement accounts go into the trust?
Generally, no - you keep ownership in your name but consider naming the trust as a beneficiary when you want timing, tax coordination, or protection for a minor or vulnerable beneficiary. We will outline options that fit your tax picture.
Can a revocable trust protect assets from nursing-home costs or lawsuits?
No. Revocable means changeable and fully controlled by you; creditors and agencies see through it. If protection is the goal, we’ll talk about irrevocable structures and the trade-offs involved.
What if I forget to move something into the trust?
Your pour-over will directs leftover probate assets into the trust at death. That safety net helps, but the goal is to fund now so you avoid probate altogether for the big-ticket items.
Does a trust help with out-of-state property?
Yes. Titling those properties to your trust avoids separate, out-of-state probates—an easy win for families with a vacation home or rental.
The outcome you should expect
You’ll finish with a private plan that keeps your family out of probate for the assets that matter, a clear path for incapacity so bills get paid and care continues, and practical instructions your trustee can follow without guesswork. More than anything, you’ll leave with relief - because the right person will be in charge, the process will be quieter, and the people you love won’t be left to figure it out in public.
If you’re ready to build the plan that makes life easier for your family, let’s start the conversation. We’ll confirm whether a Revocable Living Trust Package is the right fit - or whether a simpler Will Package meets your needs - and then we’ll make it easy to finish.
Fabisch Law, L.L.C.
401-324-9344
Rhode Island Main Office
2 Dexter St.
Pawtucket, Rhode Island 02860
East Bay, Rhode Island Office
555 Metacom Avenue
Bristol, Rhode Island
2 Dexter St.
Pawtucket, Rhode Island 02860
East Bay, Rhode Island Office
555 Metacom Avenue
Bristol, Rhode Island