Allegis Law Logo

Time for a Trust Tune-Up? Keep Your Estate Plan Current

By
Rustin Diehl, JD, LLM (Tax)
on
March 11, 2026

Table of Contents

A revocable living trust is a powerful tool for avoiding probate and ensuring a smooth transfer of assets to your loved ones. But like any tool, it works best when it’s maintained. If your trust was created years ago and hasn’t been reviewed since, it may no longer align with your current life, assets, or goals. A trust tune-up confirms your plan still works or identifies what needs to change before a problem becomes permanent.

What a Trust Tune-Up Is (and Why It’s Different Than Starting Over)

A trust tune-up is a focused review of your revocable living trust to confirm that it still aligns with your life, assets, and goals. Specifically, you should review your trustees, beneficiaries, distribution instructions, and whether key assets are properly titled to the trust. The goal of a trust tune-up is to identify gaps that can send loved ones into probate or create delays during trust administration. A tune-up doesn’t mean you made a mistake when you created your estate plan. Life changes, and your trust should reflect those changes to protect what you’ve built.

When to Update Your Trust: Common Life Triggers

You should update your living trust after major life changes, such as marriage, divorce, a new child or grandchild, or a death in the family. If your chosen trustee moved out of state, became ill, or is no longer the right fit for the role, that’s also a clear signal for a trust tune-up.

Financial changes can be just as important. Buying or selling a home, starting a business, receiving an inheritance, or building significant retirement or investment accounts can also create a need to update your trust. If your assets have changed but your trust hasn’t, your plan may not work the way you expect.

For example, a Utah couple created a trust ten years ago when their net worth was modest. Today, they own two rental properties, a vacation cabin near Park City, and a seven-figure 401(k). Their original trust never addressed rental income distribution, vacation property use among their three adult children, or tax-efficient withdrawal strategies from retirement accounts. An estate plan review would identify such issues before it’s too late to solve them.

Outdated and Unfunded Trusts: Problems That Lead to Probate

An outdated trust can point assets to the wrong people, name trustees who can’t serve, or fail to address new family dynamics. Even with a revocable living trust in place, problems can arise if key accounts or real estate were never transferred into the trust.

Unfunded or partially funded trusts often lead to avoidable probate steps in Utah, delays, and extra costs for your loved ones. A Utah family learned this the hard way when the father passed away with a well-drafted trust that was never funded. His home, bank accounts, and brokerage account were all still titled in his individual name. The family spent eight months and thousands of dollars in probate court, which was the exact outcome the trust was designed to prevent.

The goal of a trust maintenance is making sure your estate plan will work when it’s needed. Small gaps can create large problems during trust administration, a time when your family is already managing grief and stress.

How to Review a Revocable Trust

To review a revocable trust, start with the big-picture question: Does the trust still reflect your current wishes and family realities? Then confirm the details, such as who serves as trustee and successor trustee, who receives what, and when distributions occur.

A proper trust tune-up also looks at coordination with your will, powers of attorney, and healthcare directives. In Utah-focused planning, it’s helpful to confirm how your plan will operate if incapacity occurs before death. Will the successor trustee be able to manage assets for your care? Are your healthcare decisions aligned with your financial instructions?

Walk through a few scenarios. If you became incapacitated today, would your successor trustee have the authority and access needed to manage your assets? If you passed away tomorrow, would your trust direct assets to the people you want, in the way you want? If the answer to either question is no, your trust needs attention.

Critical Living Trust Updates: Guardianship, Distributions, and Funding

You may need to update your living trust language regarding guardianship references (if minor children are involved), distribution timing, and special circumstances such as a beneficiary with disabilities or creditor concerns. Even if the changes seem small, outdated provisions can create conflict or confusion during trust administration.

Failing to align the trust with real-life property ownership is an oversight. If you’ve moved, refinanced, or acquired new real estate, a trust tune-up can confirm that titling and beneficiary designations still support the plan.

For instance, many Utah families acquire a second home or cabin without retitling it into their trust. When the original owner passes away, that property goes through probate, which is exactly what the trust was designed to prevent. A quick deed change during a trust tune-up eliminates the problem.

Distribution timing is another detail that often needs updating. A trust created when your children were teenagers might direct full distribution at age 25. Now that you’ve watched one child struggle with financial responsibility, you may want staggered distributions at ages 25, 30, and 35 instead. That change is straightforward during a trust tune-up but creates serious regret if left unaddressed.

Amend Trust Document vs. Restate: The Right Fix for the Right Situation

In many cases, you can amend trust document provisions to update trustees, beneficiaries, or distribution terms without rebuilding the entire plan. Amendments work well when you’re making targeted edits and the original trust structure remains appropriate.

If you need to make or already made multiple changes to your trust, a restatement may be a cleaner approach than forcing your trustee to reconcile multiple amendments. Restating your trust means preparing a new trust document that replaces the old trust document entirely, but keeps the name and date the same to avoid re-titling trust assets. We will help you determine whether a restatement or amendment makes sense during your trust tune-up consultation.

Trust Review Checklist

Use this trust review checklist to prepare for a trust tune-up and identify likely updates. It helps you review revocable trust details systematically and spot easy fixes early.

Checklist items to review:

  • Confirm the trust’s current name, date, and any past amendments. Gather all trust documents, including the original and any amendments, so your attorney can review the complete record.
  • Verify trustees and successor trustees, plus contact information and ability to serve. Are they still willing and able? Do they live in Utah, or have they relocated? Do they understand their responsibilities?
  • Review beneficiaries, contingent beneficiaries, and distribution instructions for accuracy. Do the named beneficiaries reflect your current family? Are distribution percentages still appropriate?
  • Re-check guardianship-related provisions and family changes since signing. If you named guardians for minor children, are they still your first choice? Have any beneficiaries passed away or become estranged?
  • Confirm asset “funding”: homes, bank accounts, non-retirement accounts, and business interests titled to the trust. This is the most common failure in trust maintenance. Check deeds, account statements, and business operating agreements to confirm trust ownership.
  • Review beneficiary designations for retirement accounts and life insurance to coordinate with the trust. Beneficiary designations override trust provisions, so these must align with your overall plan.
  • Update living trust provisions for special situations: minor beneficiaries, special needs planning, blended families. If a beneficiary develops a disability, inherits wealth, or marries someone with creditor issues, your trust may need protective provisions.
  • Check for legal and tax context changes and confirm your plan is still aligned. Estate and gift tax exemptions, Utah probate rules, and trust law all evolve.
  • Digital assets represent significant wealth and access issues. Cryptocurrency, NFTs, online businesses, and digital accounts require specialized planning that traditional trusts may not address.

A trust tune-up with counsel helps translate these rules into practical decisions.

Schedule Your Trust Tune-Up

If you suspect your trust may be outdated or unfunded, schedule a consultation with Allegis Law. We will review the trust document and help you determine if it protects your wealth and family as is or if it needs to be amended or restated.

Subscribe to the Digital Asset Advisor

Understand the tax and legal risks of crypto, before your clients ask.
  • Build trust with clients by staying informed on a topic most advisors either ignore or misunderstand
  • Save time with concise updates focused on what actually matters to your practice
  • Avoid costly mistakes by understanding how new IRS rules impact your clients’ digital assets
No spam. Just clear, actionable updates.
The Digital Asset Advisor Newsletter
Learn Contact Attorney Bio
The information provided on this website is for general informational purposes only, does not constitute legal or tax advice, and does not create an attorney-client relationship. Consult qualified counsel prior to taking action on any information provided herein. Materials presented may contain AI-assisted or tool-assisted content.

For specific legal advice tailored to your situation, please schedule a consultation.
Join the Newsletter The Definitive Guide to Tax & Estate Planning for Digital Assets
Privacy Policy

©

2026

Allegis Law, LLC. All Rights Reserved.

Allegis Law Logo
Located in Sandy, Utah;
Serving Clients Nationwide
9980 S 300 W #200,
Sandy, UT 84070
Hours: 9am - 5pm MST