Trust Lawyer Naperville, IL
If you are considering creating a trust in Naperville, you may be weighing how to transfer assets to your family efficiently, avoid the delays and expense of probate, or provide for a beneficiary whose circumstances require careful planning. A properly drafted and funded trust accomplishes these goals while giving you control over how and when assets are distributed.
Madden Law LLC represents individuals and families in the creation and administration of trusts throughout the Chicago suburbs. Founder David Madden has practiced law since 2003 and has 16 years of experience drafting and administering trusts for Illinois clients. Our Naperville, IL trust lawyer reviews your family's circumstances and long-term objectives, designs a trust structure suited to those goals, and oversees the funding process so the plan actually works as intended. Call today to schedule a free consultation.
Why Choose Madden Law LLC for Trusts in Naperville, IL?
A well-constructed trust is more than a document. It is a framework that controls how property is managed during your lifetime and distributed after your death, and its effectiveness depends on careful design and proper funding. Our firm prioritizes both aspects from the first meeting through the final signature.
Sixteen Years of Trust Experience
Founder David Madden has practiced law since 2003, with 16 years specifically focused on trust drafting and administration for Illinois clients. His work spans revocable living trusts, irrevocable trusts, special needs trusts, and trust administration following a grantor's death. That breadth allows the firm to recommend a structure based on the facts of each family's circumstances rather than defaulting to a single template.
Credentials and Professional Memberships
Mr. Madden is a member of the American Bar Association, including its Real Property, Trust and Estate Law Section, as well as the Illinois State Bar Association, the Chicago Bar Association, and the DuPage County Bar Association. He earned his Juris Doctor from DePaul University College of Law in 2003, along with a Certificate in Intellectual Property Law, and his Bachelor of Arts in Political Science and Public Policy from Michigan State University in 1998.
Integrated Estate Planning Approach
A trust rarely stands alone. It typically operates alongside a pour-over will, powers of attorney, and sometimes a separate business succession plan. Our work as an estate planning lawyer in Naperville, IL means every trust is designed with these related documents in mind. Clients receive coordinated documents that function together rather than isolated instruments that may conflict.
Free Initial Consultations
The firm provides free consultations for all trust matters. Prospective clients leave the meeting with a clear understanding of whether a trust makes sense for their circumstances, what type would fit, and the steps that would follow.
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ "Dave is a very knowledgeable attorney. He took care of our will, power of attorney, and other civil docs quickly and efficiently. Highly recommend!" - Daniel McIntyre
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Types of Trust Cases We Handle in Naperville
Trusts serve a range of purposes, and the right structure depends on what the client is trying to accomplish. Our firm drafts, funds, and administers the full range of trust instruments used by Illinois families and small business owners.
- Revocable living trusts. The most widely used trust among Illinois families, a revocable living trust allows the grantor to retain control of assets during life while directing their distribution after death without court involvement. Proper funding is what makes the trust help families avoid probate in the way it is designed to.
- Irrevocable trusts. Used primarily for asset protection, tax planning, and eligibility for certain benefits, an irrevocable trust transfers ownership of property out of the grantor's estate. The trade-off is loss of control, which makes careful drafting essential.
- Special needs trusts. These trusts provide for a beneficiary with a disability without disqualifying that person from means-tested public benefits. Specific statutory requirements govern the structure, and errors can cost the beneficiary access to Medicaid or Supplemental Security Income.
- Testamentary trusts. Created within a will and taking effect only at death, testamentary trusts are frequently used to manage assets passing to minor children or young adults. Unlike living trusts, they do not avoid probate, but they remain valuable planning tools in appropriate situations.
- Trust administration. When a grantor dies or becomes incapacitated, the successor trustee must administer the trust according to its terms and applicable Illinois law. The legal challenges a trustee faces include beneficiary communications, accountings, tax filings, and distribution of assets.
- Business succession trusts. Owners of closely held companies often use trust structures as part of a business succession plan to transfer ownership in a tax-efficient manner.
- Charitable trusts. Clients with philanthropic goals may use charitable remainder trusts, charitable lead trusts, or private foundations to combine giving with estate and tax planning.
- Trust modifications and restatements. Circumstances change. A trust drafted ten years ago may need to be amended, restated, or, in some cases, decanted into a new trust under provisions of the Illinois Trust Code.
Clients often come to the firm believing a trust is essential and discover that a will may suffice, or the reverse. We review every adult's estate planning needs holistically before recommending any specific structure.
Illinois Legal Requirements for Trusts
Trusts in Illinois are governed primarily by the Illinois Trust Code, codified at 760 ILCS 3, which took effect on January 1, 2020 and replaced most of the prior Illinois Trusts and Trustees Act. The Illinois Trust Code is based on the Uniform Trust Code, adapted for Illinois-specific requirements. It governs trustee duties, beneficiary rights, modification and termination, and many other aspects of trust operation.
A valid Illinois trust generally requires an identifiable grantor with legal capacity, a clear intent to create a trust, identifiable beneficiaries, identifiable trust property, and a trustee capable of serving. When these elements are missing or poorly documented, the trust may be challenged or fail entirely. Courts interpreting Illinois trusts frequently turn to common law principles summarized in authoritative sources such as the Cornell Legal Information Institute treatment of trust law.
Trust administration also intersects with the Illinois Probate Act in a number of respects. Even when a trust is the primary vehicle for transferring assets, a pour-over will and probate proceeding may still be necessary for any property not properly titled in the trust at death. Federal tax rules add another layer. Trusts file their own income tax returns, and the IRS estate and gift tax rules apply to certain transfers into irrevocable trusts.
Illinois also imposes its own estate tax for estates above a specific exemption threshold, separate from the federal exemption. Trust planning for larger estates must account for both.
Important Aspects of a Naperville Trust Case
Trust creation is a transactional process with lasting consequences. The quality of the drafting and the care taken during funding determine whether the trust performs as intended decades after it is signed. Several components warrant particular focus.
Selecting the Right Type of Trust
The first decision is which trust structure fits the client's objectives. Revocable living trusts serve most general estate planning needs. Irrevocable structures are appropriate when asset protection or tax planning is the priority. Special needs trusts are designed for a specific beneficiary situation. Choosing the wrong vehicle often produces a document that works on paper but fails to accomplish what the client actually wanted. Our firm works through these choices with every client before drafting begins.
Choosing a Trustee
The trustee controls the trust property and owes fiduciary duties to beneficiaries. An individual trustee is common, but the role is demanding and involves real legal exposure. Corporate trustees provide professional management at a cost. Co-trustees can combine the strengths of each approach. Selection requires an honest assessment of who will actually be capable of carrying out the duties involved, not simply who the client would prefer to honor with the designation.
Proper Trust Funding
A trust only controls property that is titled in its name. Many trusts fail in practice because the grantor signed the document but never retitled the relevant assets. Real estate must be deeded to the trust. Financial accounts must be registered in the trust's name or designated with a transfer-on-death provision consistent with the plan. Retirement accounts and life insurance policies require beneficiary designations that coordinate with the trust. Our firm oversees the funding process rather than leaving it to the client.
Coordination With Other Estate Planning Documents
A trust operates alongside a pour-over will, durable power of attorney for property, power of attorney for health care, and, in some cases, a separate business succession plan. These documents must work together, and recent changes to Illinois power of attorney law illustrate why periodic review of an existing plan matters. Inconsistent or contradictory provisions in separate instruments can undo careful planning and generate litigation among family members.
Administration After the Grantor's Death
When the grantor dies, the successor trustee assumes responsibility for administering the trust. Duties include notifying beneficiaries, preparing an inventory, paying final debts and taxes, filing any required tax returns, and distributing assets according to the trust's terms. Missteps at this stage can create personal liability for the trustee and disputes among beneficiaries. Our firm represents successor trustees through each phase of administration.
Contact Madden Law LLC
Consultations are free for all trust matters. You will meet with an attorney, discuss your family's circumstances and planning objectives, and leave with a clear understanding of whether a trust is the right approach and what the process would involve.
The consultation covers assets, family structure, long-term goals, and any existing estate planning documents that may need to be updated or replaced. When a trust is the right option, we will explain the type that fits and outline next steps. When another approach better serves your situation, we will recommend that path instead.
Contact us to schedule your consultation. Thoughtful planning now preserves more choices and protects more value for the people who matter most.