THE LIVING TRUST STARTERS GUIDE
You may already know you need more structure, but nobody really explains trusts in a way that makes sense before they start throwing big legal words at you. A living trust is not just for rich people, celebrities, or families with mansions. It is one of the main tools people use to organize their assets, protect their family instructions, keep records private, and make sure their property has a clear place to go instead of everything being left scattered, exposed, or stuck in confusion.
That’s why I created Do You Trust Me? Living Trust Starter Guide. This guide breaks down what a living trust is, why people use one, the roles inside the trust, how to choose trustees and beneficiaries, what assets can be placed inside, and how asset conveyance works in simple language you can actually follow.
This is also an important step for those learning about status correction, estate structure, and moving with more order. Before you start talking about private business, family legacy, asset protection, or operating in a different capacity, you need to understand how trusts work and how property is supposed to be organized. A trust gives you a foundation to start separating what you own, who manages it, who benefits from it, and what instructions are attached to it.
This guide is for the person who has a home, car, bank accounts, business, digital assets, personal property, children, family responsibilities, or anything they want organized with more structure. You may not have everything figured out yet, but this guide gives you the understanding, worksheets, templates, and schedules to start building your trust file with clarity instead of guessing.
Inside, you’ll learn how to set up the foundation of a living trust, choose the trust roles, list your assets, prepare your schedules, understand what needs to be conveyed, and organize the paperwork that should be reviewed before anything is signed, notarized, recorded, or relied on. This guide can help you build out an actual trust setup plan with clear understanding, so you know what you are doing, what documents matter, and what questions to ask if you decide to have a professional review or finalize it.