Funding a revocable trust in Florida means re-titling your assets—your home, bank accounts, investment accounts, and other property—out of your individual name and into the name of the trust, or naming the trust as beneficiary. A signed trust document that holds nothing is just paper; until you actually move assets into it, the trust does almost nothing, and the property you meant to protect still passes through probate. Funding is the step that makes the trust work, and in Florida it carries a few traps—especially around homestead—that catch even careful people.
I have watched too many families discover, after a death, that Mom signed a beautiful trust in 2015 and never retitled a single thing. The trust was legally valid. It was also useless. This article walks through how funding is supposed to be done, in plain terms, with the Florida-specific wrinkles that matter most to homeowners.
What “funding” actually means under Florida law
A revocable living trust is created under Chapter 736 of the Florida Statutes, the Florida Trust Code. Section 736.0402 sets the bar for a valid trust: a settlor with capacity and intent, a definite beneficiary, a trustee with duties to perform, and—critically—trust property. That last requirement is the whole game. A trust without property is not really functioning as a trust.
Funding happens in two basic ways, and most well-built plans use both:
- Retitling (assignment of ownership). You change the legal owner of an asset from “Jane Smith” to “Jane Smith, as Trustee of the Jane Smith Revocable Trust dated January 3, 2026.” This is how you handle your home, brokerage accounts, and business interests.
- Beneficiary designation. For assets that pass by contract—life insurance, IRAs, 401(k)s, annuities—you generally do not retitle them into the trust during life. Instead you name a beneficiary, and in some cases that beneficiary is the trust.
Knowing which method applies to which asset is half the battle. Put a retirement account into a trust the wrong way and you can trigger income-tax consequences that a simple beneficiary form would have avoided.
Funding your Florida homestead without losing protection
This is where Florida diverges sharply from other states, and where the editorial focus of any Florida homeowner should land. Your homestead enjoys two distinct protections, and a sloppy transfer can jeopardize either one.
The constitutional creditor exemption
Article X, Section 4 of the Florida Constitution shields your homestead from forced sale by most creditors. There are narrow exceptions—mortgages on the property, property taxes, and liens for labor or materials used to improve it—but a general money judgment cannot reach your home. Many homeowners worry that deeding the house into a trust forfeits this protection. It does not, if done correctly.
Florida courts and Section 736.0505 of the Florida Statutes establish that property held in a revocable trust is reachable by the settlor’s creditors only to the extent it would not already be exempt if owned directly. Because you still own and control a revocable trust completely, the homestead retains its constitutional armor. The drafting should make clear that you retain the right to occupy the residence for life.
The homestead tax exemption (and Save Our Homes)
Separately, your homestead qualifies for the property-tax exemption and the Save Our Homes assessment cap. To preserve these after a transfer to trust, most Florida county property appraisers want to see that the trust grants the settlor a present possessory right to the home. The deed and the trust language should align. When clients ask whether they need to re-file for the exemption after funding, the safe answer is to confirm with the county appraiser—practices vary by county.
Debt-payment language used to be a landmine
Older trusts often contained a boilerplate clause directing the trustee to pay the settlor’s debts and expenses. For years there was a real fear that such language could expose homestead to creditors of the estate. The Legislature settled this with Florida Statute § 736.1109, effective July 1, 2021, which provides that a general direction to pay debts and expenses does not, by itself, subject protected homestead to those claims. If your trust predates 2021, it is worth a review, but the statute now offers a meaningful backstop.
For a deeper walk-through of how homestead, deeds, and probate interact, see our overview of Florida probate and how trust funding helps your family avoid it.
How to retitle the most common Florida assets
Funding is methodical, asset by asset. Here is the order I generally work through with clients:
- Real estate. Execute and record a new deed—usually a warranty deed or quitclaim deed—conveying the property to you as trustee. For your homestead, the deed should reference your retained life occupancy. Record it in the county where the property sits. Check whether your mortgage contains a due-on-sale clause; federal law (the Garn-St. Germain Act) protects most transfers of an owner-occupied residence into a revocable trust, but confirm before recording.
- Bank and brokerage accounts. Visit each institution and change the account title to the trust. Some banks will simply re-title; others open a new account. Investment firms typically require a copy of the trust or a certification of trust under § 736.1017.
- Vehicles and boats. Often left out of the trust in Florida for practical reasons, but high-value vessels are sometimes included.
- Business interests. LLC membership interests and closely held shares are assigned to the trust, with the operating agreement and any transfer restrictions reviewed first.
- Tangible personal property. Furniture, jewelry, art, and collections pass by a written assignment of personal property into the trust.
Each transfer should leave a paper trail. I keep a funding schedule for every client so the successor trustee knows exactly what the trust owns and where the records live.
Assets you should fund by beneficiary designation, not by deed
Some property should never be retitled into the trust during your lifetime:
- IRAs, 401(k)s, and other tax-deferred retirement accounts. Retitling these into a trust is treated as a distribution and can detonate an immediate income-tax bill. Instead, name beneficiaries directly, and only name the trust as beneficiary if there is a specific reason—minor children, a beneficiary with creditor problems, or special-needs planning—and only with trust language drafted to qualify as a “see-through” trust.
- Life insurance and annuities. Usually pass by beneficiary form. Naming the trust can be appropriate when you want centralized control over the payout.
- Payable-on-death and transfer-on-death accounts. These already avoid probate, but coordinate them with the trust so they do not accidentally undercut your overall plan.
Coordinating retirement accounts with a trust is genuinely technical, and the rules around required distributions have shifted in recent years. This is an area where the analysis our colleagues describe in their discussion of applies regardless of state line, and where guidance overlaps heavily with considerations such as long-term-care eligibility.
The pour-over will: your safety net, not your plan
Even with diligent funding, something usually slips through—an account opened after signing, a forgotten timeshare, a tax refund. A pour-over will catches those stray assets and directs them into the trust at death. But the pour-over will only operates through probate. It is a net, not a substitute for funding. If you rely on it to do the heavy lifting, you have reintroduced the very probate process you paid to avoid.
Common funding mistakes I see in Florida
- Signing and shelving. The trust is executed, congratulations are exchanged, and nothing is ever retitled.
- Forgetting the homestead deed details. A bare transfer without proper homestead language can complicate the tax exemption.
- Dumping an IRA into the trust. An avoidable tax disaster.
- New assets, old plan. A vacation condo bought three years after funding, titled individually, that no one circles back to retitle.
- No funding schedule. The successor trustee is left guessing what the trust actually holds.
If you own property in more than one state, funding becomes even more valuable—it can spare your family a separate ancillary probate in each state. Florida residents with a second home up north should pay particular attention here.
Reviewing and maintaining a funded trust
Funding is not a one-time event. Every time you open an account, buy real estate, or sell a major asset, you should ask whether the change needs to be reflected in the trust. I recommend a funding review every few years, and after any major life event—marriage, divorce, a new property, a death in the family. A trust is a living instrument; treat it like one.
For Florida-specific estate planning and homestead-aware trust funding, our team can review your existing documents and build a funding schedule that actually holds up. You can reach the Florida estate planning group or contact our office to start.
This article is general information about Florida law and is not legal advice. Speak with a licensed Florida attorney about your specific situation.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does putting my Florida home in a revocable trust cause me to lose the homestead exemption?
No, not if the transfer is done correctly. Because a revocable trust is fully controlled by you, the property retains both the constitutional creditor protection under Article X, Section 4 and, in most counties, the homestead tax exemption—provided the deed and trust grant you a present right to occupy the residence. Florida Statute § 736.0505 confirms that revocable-trust property is only reachable by creditors to the extent it would not already be exempt if you owned it directly.
Should I retitle my IRA or 401(k) into my revocable trust?
Generally no. Retitling a tax-deferred retirement account into a trust is usually treated as a taxable distribution, triggering immediate income tax. Instead, you fund these accounts through beneficiary designations, and you only name the trust as beneficiary in specific situations—such as minor or special-needs beneficiaries—using trust language drafted to qualify as a see-through trust.
What happens to assets I forget to put in my trust?
That is what a pour-over will is for. It catches assets still in your individual name at death and directs them into the trust. The catch is that the pour-over will operates through probate, so any assets it captures still go through the court process you were trying to avoid. The fix is diligent funding during life, not reliance on the will.
Does Florida Statute 736.1109 affect my older trust?
It may help it. Effective July 1, 2021, § 736.1109 clarifies that a general direction in a trust to pay the settlor’s debts and expenses does not by itself expose protected homestead to those claims. Older trusts often contained debt-payment boilerplate that raised concerns about homestead exposure, so if your trust predates 2021 it is worth having an attorney review the homestead provisions.
How often should I review whether my trust is fully funded?
Review funding every few years and after any major event—buying or selling real estate, opening new accounts, marriage, divorce, or a death in the family. New assets acquired after the trust was signed are a frequent gap, so make retitling part of your routine whenever you acquire something significant.
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