A husband and wife can establish a joint revocable living trust.
While the trustor serves as a trustee or a co-trustee, a separate tax return is not required for the trust.
The revocable living trust allows the trustee to buy, sell and finance assets just as before.
In the event of incapacitation, management of the living trust passes to the successor trustee without the necessity of a court-appointed conservator.
The living trust can be cancelled or changed at any time before death or incapacitation.
Probate - including multi-state probate - is avoided when assets are held in a living trust. (Often probate takes 9 to 12 months.)
Privacy. When a decedent dies with a living trust, the provisions of that trust usually do not become public.
Litigation is discouraged by a living trust.
A married couple with a living trust can reduce or eliminate federal estate taxes by setting up an Exemption Trust. While both are alive the assets remain in the revocable living trust. Upon the death of a spouse, the trust is split into two trusts: the survivors trust and an exemption trust. (For tax purposes, the surviving spouse and the exemption trust are two separate taxpayers.)