If you're a physician, business owner, real estate investor, or anyone with significant wealth and lawsuit exposure, you've probably wondered: how do I protect my assets from creditors and lawsuits? The answer — if you're willing to give up direct control of those assets and work within strict legal boundaries — is an asset protection trust.
Asset protection trusts are irrevocable trusts designed specifically to shield your wealth from future creditors, legal judgments, and lawsuits. They work by legally separating you from ownership of the assets while still allowing you to benefit from them under certain conditions. But they're not magic shields — they're complex legal tools with strict timing requirements, fraudulent transfer risks, and significant costs. This guide breaks down everything you need to know.
Asset protection trusts (APTs) are irrevocable trusts that shield assets from future creditors by transferring legal ownership to the trust. 19 states allow domestic APTs (DAPTs) where you can benefit from your own trust; the strongest are Nevada, South Dakota, Delaware, Alaska, and Wyoming. APTs cost $5,000-$15,000+ to establish, require a 2-4 year "seasoning period" to be fully effective, and cannot protect against existing creditors, divorce, or child support. They're for high-net-worth individuals in high-risk professions — not typical estate planning.
An asset protection trust (APT) is an irrevocable trust established with the primary purpose of protecting assets from future creditors. You transfer ownership of assets — cash, real estate, investment accounts, business interests — into the trust. A trustee (either a professional trustee or someone you designate) legally owns and manages those assets. Because you no longer own the assets, creditors cannot reach them if you are sued or face a legal judgment.
The critical legal principle: creditors can only reach assets you own. If you've transferred ownership to an irrevocable trust and you don't retain the power to revoke it or unilaterally take assets back, those assets are generally beyond creditors' reach.
Asset protection trusts come in two categories:
As of 2026, 19 U.S. states have enacted legislation allowing self-settled domestic asset protection trusts (DAPTs). These states vary widely in the strength of protections, the statute of limitations for fraudulent transfer claims, and the procedural rules governing the trusts.
Five states are generally considered to have the strongest, most creditor-protective DAPT statutes:
The following states also allow DAPTs, though their statutes may be newer, less tested, or offer fewer protections: Tennessee, Utah, Missouri, Oklahoma, Rhode Island, Ohio, Virginia, West Virginia, New Hampshire, Michigan, Mississippi, Indiana, Connecticut, and Hawaii.
💡 Key Point: You do not have to live in a DAPT state to establish a DAPT there. A California resident can establish a Nevada DAPT, for example, as long as they comply with Nevada's requirements (such as using a Nevada-based trustee and having some connection to Nevada). However, conflicts of law issues arise — your home state's courts may not recognize the DAPT protections.
Before U.S. states began allowing DAPTs, the only way to establish a self-settled asset protection trust was to form it in an offshore jurisdiction — typically the Cook Islands, Nevis, Belize, or the Cayman Islands. Offshore APTs remain the strongest form of asset protection for several reasons:
However, offshore trusts have significant downsides:
For most U.S. residents, a domestic asset protection trust in a strong DAPT state offers 80% of the protection at 30% of the cost and complexity of an offshore trust.
The single most important concept in asset protection planning is the fraudulent transfer rule (also called fraudulent conveyance). This is the doctrine that prevents you from shielding assets from creditors who already have a claim or whose claims are reasonably foreseeable.
A transfer of assets is considered fraudulent — and can be voided by a court — if:
Each DAPT state has a statute of limitations — called the "seasoning period" — after which a transfer into the trust is protected from fraudulent transfer claims. This period ranges from 2 to 4 years in most states.
| State | Statute of Limitations (Seasoning Period) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Nevada | 2 years | One of the shortest — strong protection quickly |
| South Dakota | 2 years | Short seasoning period; strong law |
| Wyoming | 2 years | Short period; favorable case law developing |
| Delaware | 4 years | Longer seasoning but strongest overall law |
| Alaska | 4 years | Longer period; well-developed case law |
The key takeaway: You must establish and fund your asset protection trust well before any claim arises. Ideally, you establish the trust when you have no creditor issues and no foreseeable lawsuits. This is called "planning from a position of strength." Waiting until you're sued — or even until you anticipate being sued — is too late.
⚠️ Critical Warning: If you transfer assets to an asset protection trust after a claim arises or when you know a claim is likely (for example, a doctor transferring assets after a bad surgical outcome but before the patient sues), the transfer will almost certainly be voided as a fraudulent conveyance. Courts have no sympathy for debtors who try to hide assets from existing creditors. Asset protection planning must be done proactively, not reactively.
Asset protection trusts are not for everyone. They're expensive, complex, and require giving up direct control of your assets. But for certain high-risk, high-net-worth individuals, they're invaluable.
Medical malpractice insurance has limits — commonly $1-3 million per occurrence. If a catastrophic malpractice case results in a $10 million judgment, the physician is personally liable for the excess. An asset protection trust established years before the incident can shield personal assets from this excess judgment.
Business owners face lawsuits from customers, employees, vendors, competitors, and regulatory agencies. While business entities (LLCs, corporations) provide some liability protection, they don't protect against personal guarantees, fraud claims, or claims that pierce the corporate veil. An APT protects the business owner's personal wealth accumulated outside the business.
Landlords face slip-and-fall lawsuits, tenant injury claims, fair housing complaints, and environmental liability. While each property should be held in a separate LLC, investors who own multiple properties or significant liquid assets benefit from an APT protecting those assets from claims related to any single property.
Celebrities, executives, and public figures are magnets for frivolous lawsuits and aggressive creditors. Asset protection trusts can shield wealth from claims designed to extract settlements simply because the defendant is perceived as wealthy.
Accountants, attorneys, engineers, architects, and financial advisors all face professional liability exposure. While professional liability insurance (E&O coverage) provides some protection, asset protection trusts add an additional layer for catastrophic claims.
Most middle-class Americans do not need an asset protection trust. Here's why:
Asset protection trusts are not cheap. Here's what to expect:
For a $2 million domestic APT, expect $10,000 to establish and $15,000 - $30,000 annually to maintain. This makes APTs economical only for individuals with significant assets and genuine high risk of creditor claims.
For business owners and real estate investors, the most common question is: should I use an LLC, an asset protection trust, or both?
An LLC (Limited Liability Company) protects your personal assets from liabilities arising from the business or property held in the LLC. If a tenant sues over a slip-and-fall at a rental property held in an LLC, the tenant can only reach the LLC's assets (the property itself) — not your personal bank accounts, home, or other assets. This is called "inside-out" protection.
An LLC does not protect the LLC interest itself from your personal creditors. If you personally guarantee a loan, commit fraud, or are sued for malpractice in your professional capacity, a creditor with a judgment against you personally can obtain a charging order against your LLC interest — allowing them to receive distributions from the LLC (though not control it). This is where LLCs are weak.
An asset protection trust protects assets inside the trust from your personal creditors — providing "outside-in" protection. If you transfer your LLC interests into an asset protection trust, your personal creditors cannot reach those interests (subject to fraudulent transfer rules and the seasoning period).
The strongest asset protection structure for business owners and real estate investors is:
This creates a multi-layered shield: business/property liabilities can't reach your personal assets (LLC shield), and your personal creditors can't reach the business/property assets (APT shield).
Asset protection trusts are powerful, but they have strict limitations:
If you owe money when you transfer assets into the trust, the transfer can be voided as a fraudulent conveyance. APTs only protect against future creditors — claims that arise after the seasoning period has passed.
Most states treat property transferred to an asset protection trust as still subject to division in divorce. Courts have broad equitable powers in divorce cases and will often "reach through" an APT, especially if it was established during the marriage or funded with marital property. Some courts have even found settlors in contempt for refusing to turn over APT assets during divorce proceedings.
Public policy strongly favors enforcement of child support and alimony obligations. Courts will pierce an APT to satisfy these obligations, and judges have no tolerance for attempts to avoid supporting children or ex-spouses.
The IRS has broad powers to collect unpaid taxes, including the ability to reach assets transferred to trusts in many circumstances. While APTs may delay IRS collection efforts, they rarely prevent it entirely.
If you live in California and establish a Nevada DAPT, a California court may refuse to recognize the Nevada protections and apply California law instead (which does not allow DAPTs). This is an evolving area of law with limited case law, creating uncertainty.
Asset protection trusts do not protect against claims arising from criminal acts or intentional torts (fraud, assault, defamation). Courts view these as morally indefensible and will pierce APTs to satisfy judgments.
⚠️ What APTs Cannot Do: Asset protection trusts cannot be used to commit fraud, hide assets from the IRS, avoid criminal prosecution, or evade legal obligations. They are legal planning tools for protecting wealth from future, unforeseen creditor claims. Using them improperly can result in criminal prosecution, contempt of court, or complete loss of the assets.
Because of the complexity and legal risks, you must work with an experienced asset protection attorney to establish an APT. Here's the general process:
Find an attorney who specializes in asset protection planning — not a general estate planning attorney. Asset protection law is a niche specialty. Look for attorneys who are members of the Wealth Protection Alliance or similar professional groups. Expect to pay $300-$600/hour for their time.
The attorney will assess your profession, assets, current liabilities, and risk tolerance. They'll help you determine whether an APT is appropriate or whether simpler strategies (insurance, LLCs) are sufficient.
Decide whether to establish a domestic APT (and in which state) or an offshore APT. This decision depends on your risk level, asset size, and tolerance for complexity.
Most DAPT states require a resident trustee or a licensed trust company in that state. You'll need to select and hire a professional trustee. Offshore trusts require an offshore trustee.
Your attorney will draft the trust document, specifying the trustee's powers, distribution standards, beneficiaries (typically you and your family), and other terms. You'll sign the trust and fund it by transferring assets.
Transfer assets into the trust — cash, securities, real estate, LLC interests. Each transfer must comply with fraudulent transfer laws (no transfers to defraud existing creditors). The seasoning period begins when assets are transferred.
File annual tax returns (Form 1041 for domestic trusts, plus Form 3520/3520-A for offshore trusts). Pay trustee fees. Review and update the trust as laws and circumstances change.
Before committing to the cost and complexity of an APT, consider these alternatives:
A $2 million personal umbrella policy costs $400-800/year. For most professionals, this provides sufficient protection at a tiny fraction of an APT's cost.
Max out your 401(k), IRA, and other retirement accounts. These have strong federal and state creditor protections and are often judgment-proof.
If you live in a state with a strong homestead exemption (Florida, Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, Iowa), pay down your mortgage and build home equity — it's protected from most creditors.
In community property states, retitle high-risk assets in the name of the lower-risk spouse. For example, if one spouse is a physician and the other is not employed, title investment accounts in the non-physician spouse's name. (Caution: this has divorce implications and must be done carefully.)
Properly structured LLCs and S-corporations provide significant liability protection for business owners at much lower cost than an APT.
Simply holding assets in a foreign bank account provides some practical (though not legal) protection by making it harder for creditors to locate and seize assets. However, this does not provide legal protection and triggers extensive IRS reporting.