When people hear the term “trust,” they often think about taxes, wealth, or complicated legal maneuvers. But the most practical reason for creating a revocable living trust is much simpler: avoiding probate in other states.
Probate in New Jersey: Quick and Easy
Here in New Jersey, probate is remarkably simple. To validate a will, the executor takes the original to the county surrogate’s office—an elected official who handles estate matters. Most wills drafted by attorneys meet the legal requirements, so the surrogate’s office probates the Will without issue in twenty minutes. There’s no courtroom, no judge, no drawn-out battle. It’s an office visit that costs around $200. For many families, that’s the beginning and the end of probate.
The Problem of Ancillary Probate
Things change if you own property outside New Jersey. Take Florida, for example. A New Jersey resident who passes away while still holding a Florida condo or vacation home must go through a separate probate process there—known as ancillary probate.
Unlike New Jersey’s streamlined system, Florida probate can be expensive and time-consuming. Costs often run about 3% of the value of the property. On a $500,000 home, that’s roughly $15,000 lost to fees and costs, plus months of delays.
How a Revocable Living Trust Helps
A revocable living trust avoids this problem. By transferring the out-of-state property into the trust during life, the trustee can pass it on to heirs directly after death—without court involvement in any state. That means no ancillary probate in Florida, Pennsylvania, or anywhere else.
The trust essentially acts as a substitute for a will, ensuring assets move smoothly no matter where they are located.
Clearing Up Misconceptions
Some people believe trusts provide tax breaks. That’s not true for revocable trusts:
- Step-Up in Basis: Assets in a revocable trust still receive a full step-up in basis at death, just as if they were owned individually. This eliminates built-in capital gains and ensures heirs aren’t hit with large tax bills.
- Death Taxes: A revocable trust does not reduce inheritance or estate taxes. Those obligations are determined by federal and state law, not by the existence of a revocable trust.
The benefit is administrative, not tax-based: smoother transfers, no duplicate probate, and added privacy.
The Bottom Line
For families whose lives and property are entirely in New Jersey, a revocable living trust may not be necessary. Probate here is easy, inexpensive, and fast. But for anyone with out-of-state real estate, the story is different. Avoiding ancillary probate—especially in places like Florida—can save thousands of dollars and months of stress.
That’s the true value of a revocable living trust: not tax magic, but practical peace of mind.