Funding a living trust means transferring selected assets into the trust so the trust actually controls them. People often sign a revocable living trust and assume the planning is complete, but the trust may not control anything until accounts, deeds, assignments, and other ownership records are reviewed and updated where appropriate.
Last reviewed: March 9, 2026
Reviewed against: trust-account and fiduciary sources listed on the sources page.
Publisher: Larry Trustee AI Editorial Team | hello@larrytrustee.ai
Trust funding matters because a trust usually controls only the assets that are titled to it or otherwise assigned to it. If property is left outside the trust, the owner may still need probate or other transfer steps later. That is why living trust planning and trust funding are separate tasks, even when they happen close together.
A living trust packet often uses a schedule of assets, assignment language, and a certification of trust to help organize funding. The certification can be shown to financial institutions that want proof of trustee authority without receiving the full trust agreement.
Larry Trustee AI organizes the packet and prompts users for funding-related information, but users should still have the final funding steps reviewed before relying on them. Real estate recording, institution forms, tax treatment, and state-law rules can vary materially from one asset category to another.
Funding a living trust means transferring selected property into the trust so the trust, not the individual name alone, controls that property under the plan.
Usually no. Signing the trust agreement starts the plan, but property-transfer, titling, assignment, and beneficiary-coordination steps are often still needed.
Not always. Different assets can involve different titling, tax, beneficiary, or lender issues, so attorney and institution-specific review is important before changing ownership.