How to Amend a Revocable Trust:
Complete Guide 2026

📅 March 26, 2026 ✍️ Law-Trust Editorial Team ⏳ 14 min read 🇺🇸 US Edition
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✍️ Law-Trust.com Editorial Team · Editorial Policy · Last reviewed: March 2026

Life changes — and your revocable living trust should change with it. Whether you’ve gotten married, divorced, welcomed a new grandchild, bought a vacation property, or simply changed your mind about who should receive your estate, a trust amendment keeps your plan current and legally binding.

The good news: amending a revocable trust is far simpler than creating one from scratch. Unlike an irrevocable trust (which is almost impossible to change), a revocable trust is — by its very nature — designed to be modified. This guide walks you through exactly how to do it correctly, whether you choose to amend a specific clause, restate the entire trust, or revoke it entirely.

⚡ Quick Answer

To amend a revocable trust: draft a formal Trust Amendment document identifying the trust by name and date, specifying the exact provision being changed, signing it with the same formalities as the original (typically notarization), and storing it with your original trust documents. For multiple changes, consider a full Trust Restatement instead. Most online estate planning services include free amendments for members.

Why You Might Need to Amend Your Revocable Trust

Estate planning attorneys recommend reviewing your revocable trust every three to five years — and immediately after any major life event. The most common reasons to amend include:

ℹ️ Divorce and trusts: In most states, divorce automatically revokes will provisions in favor of an ex-spouse — but does NOT automatically revoke trust provisions. After divorce, you must actively amend your trust to remove your ex-spouse. This is one of the most common and dangerous oversights in estate planning.

Trust Amendment vs. Trust Restatement

Before drafting anything, decide whether you need a trust amendment or a trust restatement.

Trust Amendment

A trust amendment modifies specific provisions of your original trust while leaving everything else intact. Think of it as an addendum. Use an amendment when making one or two simple changes — updating a successor trustee or changing one beneficiary’s share.

Trust Restatement

A trust restatement replaces the entire trust text while keeping the original trust entity alive. The trust continues under the same name and date, but with entirely new terms. Assets already titled in the trust don’t need to be re-titled — a major practical advantage. Use a restatement when you have multiple accumulated amendments, when the original trust is significantly outdated, or when your life situation has changed dramatically.

FactorAmendmentRestatement
Changes scopeOne or a few provisionsEntire document
Original trust continues?Yes, with modificationsYes, fully replaced
Re-title assets required?NoNo (usually)
Risk of ambiguityHigher (amendments stack)Lower (clean document)
Typical attorney cost$150–$500$500–$2,000

Step-by-Step: How to Amend a Revocable Trust

1

Review Your Original Trust Document

Before drafting, read your original trust — especially the amendment provisions section. Most trusts specify exactly how amendments must be executed. You must follow those requirements or your amendment may be invalid.

2

Identify Exactly What Needs to Change

Be specific: cite the Article number, Section number, and exact language of the provision being modified. Vague amendments create ambiguity that courts have to interpret — often not as you intended.

3

Draft the Trust Amendment Document

The amendment should include: (1) the full legal name and date of your trust, (2) your name as grantor/trustee, (3) a clear statement invoking your amendment right, (4) the specific provision(s) being deleted and replaced, and (5) a statement that all other provisions remain unchanged.

4

Sign with Proper Formalities

Sign the amendment with the same formalities required for the original trust. In most states: sign before a notary. Some states also require witnesses. Never skip notarization — courts frequently invalidate improperly executed amendments even when the intent is clear.

5

Store the Amendment with Your Trust

Attach the signed, notarized amendment to your original trust binder. Number amendments chronologically (Amendment No. 1, No. 2, etc.). Make sure your successor trustee knows where all documents are stored.

6

Update Beneficiary Designations If Needed

A trust amendment alone does NOT update beneficiary designations on retirement accounts, life insurance, or transfer-on-death accounts. If your amendment changes who receives assets, also update beneficiary designations directly with financial institutions.

7

Review Your Pour-Over Will

If you made major changes to beneficiaries or distribution schemes, review your pour-over will to ensure consistency with the updated trust plan.

⚠️ Don’t cross things out: Never attempt to amend your trust by handwriting changes directly on the original document, crossing out provisions, or inserting new language in the margins. Courts may refuse to honor such modifications. Always create a formal, separate amendment document.

State-Specific Requirements for Trust Amendments

StateNotarizationWitnessesNotes
CaliforniaRequiredNot requiredUniform Trust Code; amendment must be in writing
FloridaRequired2 witnesses requiredStrict formalities — same as executing a will
TexasRecommendedNot requiredMust comply with trust’s own amendment clause
New YorkRequiredNot requiredMust be signed and acknowledged before notary
IllinoisRequiredNot requiredIllinois Trust Code: writing and grantor’s signature
WashingtonRequiredNot requiredSame manner as original execution

Common Mistakes When Amending a Revocable Trust

Mistake 1: Not Identifying the Trust Correctly

Your amendment must identify the trust precisely — using its full legal name and original date. If you have a “John A. Smith Revocable Living Trust dated January 15, 2018,” your amendment must reference it exactly. Misidentifying the trust can raise questions about which document the amendment applies to.

Mistake 2: Stacking Too Many Amendments

If you’ve made four or five amendments over the years, the document becomes unwieldy. After two or three amendments, consider a full trust restatement to consolidate everything into a clean, readable document.

Mistake 3: Skipping Notarization

This is the most common mistake. Even if the change seems minor, always have your signature notarized. The $5–$20 notary fee is trivial compared to the cost of litigation over an invalid amendment.

Mistake 4: Forgetting Beneficiary Designations

If your amendment changes who inherits your assets, but you have retirement accounts and life insurance with outdated beneficiary designations, those assets will pass by the beneficiary designation — bypassing your trust entirely.

Mistake 5: Assuming Divorce Updates the Trust

As noted earlier — it doesn’t. After divorce, amend your trust explicitly to remove your ex-spouse from all roles: beneficiary, trustee, and successor trustee.

How to Amend Your Trust Online

If you created your trust through an online estate planning service, amending it is often simple — log in, update your information, and download fresh documents.

When You Should Hire an Attorney Instead

Some situations call for professional legal advice rather than DIY amendments:

Keep Your Trust Current with Trust & Will

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Frequently Asked Questions

Can I amend a revocable trust without an attorney?
Yes. A revocable trust can be amended at any time by the grantor. A properly drafted, notarized amendment is all that is required in most states. Online estate planning services with unlimited updates make this straightforward. For complex changes, consult an estate planning attorney.
What is the difference between a trust amendment and a trust restatement?
A trust amendment modifies specific provisions while leaving the rest intact. A trust restatement replaces the entire trust content while keeping the original trust entity alive — same name, same date, no re-titling of assets required. Use an amendment for minor changes; a restatement when many provisions need updating or the trust is significantly outdated.
Do I need to re-title my assets after amending a trust?
Generally no. If you’re only changing trust terms without creating a brand new trust, assets already titled in the trust remain correctly titled. The amendment updates instructions governing those assets. If you revoke the old trust entirely and create a new one, you would need to re-title assets.
How do I amend a trust if I’m a co-trustee with my spouse?
For a joint revocable trust, both spouses typically must sign any amendment. Requirements depend on state law and the trust’s amendment clause. Read your trust carefully. After one spouse dies, the surviving spouse generally has sole amendment power — or the deceased spouse’s share may become irrevocable depending on trust structure.
What happens if I amend a trust but don’t sign it properly?
An improperly executed amendment may be invalid, leaving your original trust terms in control. Courts have voided amendments missing required notarization, signatures, or witnesses. Your intended changes would be ignored entirely. Always follow your state’s execution requirements.
When should I update my revocable trust?
Review and potentially amend after: marriage or divorce; birth or adoption; death of a beneficiary or trustee; significant change in assets; moving to a different state; major tax law changes; or estrangement from a beneficiary. Estate planners recommend reviewing every 3–5 years regardless.
Can I remove a beneficiary from my revocable trust?
Yes — you can add, remove, or change beneficiaries at any time during your lifetime. Draft a trust amendment specifying the change, sign before a notary, and store it with your trust documents. This is one of the key advantages of a revocable trust over an irrevocable one.
How much does it cost to amend a revocable trust?
Online services with unlimited updates may charge nothing extra. An attorney typically charges $150–$500 for a simple amendment and $500–$2,000 for a full restatement. Notarization adds $5–$25.
Does amending a trust affect assets already in the trust?
Amending trust terms affects how assets are managed and distributed going forward but does not remove assets from the trust or require re-funding. Assets already properly titled remain in the trust.
Can I change the trustee in a trust amendment?
Yes — changing your successor trustee is one of the most common amendments. You can add, remove, or reorder successor trustees through a properly executed amendment. The amendment targets successor trustee designation, not your current role as trustee.
Is there a limit to how many times I can amend a revocable trust?
No legal limit. You can amend as many times as needed. However, if amendments accumulate significantly, a full trust restatement is cleaner and easier for your successor trustee to follow.
What is the revocation trap with multiple wills and trusts?
Creating a new will or trust sometimes includes language that automatically revokes prior documents. If you’re amending a trust while also updating your will, ensure neither document contains broad revocation language that would unintentionally invalidate the other. Have an attorney review both documents for inadvertent revocation.

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