There’s a stubborn myth that trusts are only for the rich — something you set up once you’ve got a few million in the bank. For young families in Michigan, that myth is actually backwards. The less margin for error you have, the more it matters that your kids and assets are protected if something happens to you unexpectedly. And a living trust does things for parents of young children that a basic will can’t.
The real risk young parents overlook
When you’re in your 30s or 40s with small kids, the scenario to plan for isn’t a distant retirement-age death. It’s the unlikely-but-catastrophic one: both parents in an accident, a sudden illness. The questions that follow are brutal in their practicality. Who raises the children? Who controls the money meant to support them? At what age do the kids actually receive it?
A simple will names a guardian — and that’s essential, every parent needs it. But a will alone leaves a gap: if you die while your children are minors, any inheritance they receive may have to be managed through a court-supervised conservatorship, and then handed over to them in a lump sum at 18. Most parents are horrified by the idea of an 18-year-old inheriting a life insurance payout outright.
How a living trust protects children
A revocable living trust lets you build in the controls a will can’t:
· Staggered distributions. Instead of everything at 18, you can direct that funds be used for health, education, and support, with portions released at ages you choose — say 25, 30, and 35.
· One trusted manager. You name a successor trustee to manage the money for your kids’ benefit, avoiding court involvement and keeping the guardian (who raises them) separate from the trustee (who manages the money) if you want that check and balance.
· Protection for a child with special needs. Distributions can be structured so they don’t jeopardize a disabled child’s eligibility for government benefits.
· Privacy and speed. Your family avoids probate, so support for the children isn’t delayed by court timelines.
For a young family, much of the “estate” is often a life insurance policy — and that’s exactly the point. A trust can be the beneficiary of that policy, so a large payout is managed responsibly for your children rather than dropped into a teenager’s lap or tied up in court.
“But we don’t have much yet”
That’s the most common reason young families delay — and the weakest one. Planning isn’t about your current net worth; it’s about the value of what your kids would receive (often magnified by life insurance) and about who makes decisions in a crisis. The cost of setting up a plan now is small compared to the chaos of having no plan at all.
The team at Rochester Law Center and other Michigan estate planning firms regularly work with parents who assumed they were “too young” or “didn’t have enough” to need a trust — and who discover their situation is exactly the one trusts were designed for.
A simple starting point
If you do nothing else this year, get these in place:
1. Guardianship named for your kids (in your will).
2. A living trust to manage any inheritance on your terms, not the court’s.
3. Powers of attorney — financial and medical — so someone can act if you’re incapacitated.
4. Beneficiary designations reviewed so they actually point where you intend.
The takeaway
For young Michigan families, a living trust isn’t a luxury — it’s a way to make sure that if the worst happens, your children are raised by the people you chose and supported by money managed the way you intended. That peace of mind has nothing to do with being wealthy.
This article is for general education and is not legal advice. Consult a licensed Michigan attorney about your family’s needs.
Author bio: Contributed in partnership with Rochester Law Center, PLLC, founded by Michigan attorney Chris Atallah, helping families across Michigan with wills, trusts, and estate planning.
