Estate Planning · RI

Asset Protection Planning in Rhode Island

Rhode Island asset protection involves layering — exemption planning, business entities, retirement accounts, and (for some) Domestic Asset Protection Trusts (DAPTs) in DAPT-friendly states.

Published May 9, 2026
## Asset protection planning in Rhode Island **Asset protection** is structuring assets so that creditors, lawsuit plaintiffs, and other claimants can't easily reach them. Rhode Island residents have multiple tools — but timing matters and post-claim transfers may be voidable. ## The basic principle **Effective asset protection:** - Done BEFORE claims arise - Layered (multiple protections) - Legal + ethical - Documented + maintained - Coordinated with estate planning **Limitations:** - Cannot defraud existing creditors (fraudulent transfer law) - Bankruptcy court can unwind some transfers - Federal claims often pierce protection - Tax obligations harder to escape - Family-law obligations limited protection ## State exemption planning **Exemptions vary widely by state:** **${s.name}-specific exemptions:** - Homestead (varies $0-unlimited) - Personal property - Vehicle - Tools of trade - Wages (federal + state) - Public benefits - Insurance proceeds - Retirement accounts (federal + state) - Burial plots - Wedding rings **Some "debtor-friendly" states** (FL, TX, OK, KS): - Unlimited homestead - Strong personal property - Wage protections - Annuity protections **${s.name} should be researched** for specific exemptions. ## Federal exemptions (always available) **ERISA-qualified plans:** - 401(k), 403(b), pensions - Unlimited federal protection - Even in bankruptcy - Even from most creditors **IRAs (limited federal):** - $1.5M+ in bankruptcy (BAPCPA, indexed) - State law for non-bankruptcy creditors - Variable protection by state **Social Security:** - Generally protected from most creditors - Specific federal exceptions (taxes, child support) **VA benefits, military pensions:** - Specific federal protections - Limited exceptions ## Business entity planning **LLC asset protection:** **1. Inside protection** (entity from owner's debts): - LLC owns asset - Owner's creditor cannot reach asset - Charging order = only remedy in many states - Single-member LLCs weaker protection - Multi-member LLCs stronger **2. Outside protection** (owner from entity's debts): - Owner's personal assets protected from LLC debts - Standard limited liability - Pierce-the-veil exceptions - Care to maintain entity formality **LLC selection criteria:** - ${s.name} LLC strength - Series LLCs (some states) - Multi-state considerations - Operating agreement provisions **Strong LLC states:** - Wyoming - Nevada - Delaware - South Dakota - Often used for holding companies ## Real-estate protection **Holding real-estate in LLC:** - Each property in own LLC - Limits liability to one property - Insurance + LLC layered - Personal residence sometimes excluded (homestead) **Tenancy by the entirety:** - Married couples only - Some states (FL, TN, ME, etc.) - Property protected from individual creditor - Lost on divorce / death of spouse **Homestead protection:** - ${s.name} homestead amount - Often requires declaration - Limited to primary residence - Federal bankruptcy cap ($189,050 for non-residential states) ## Domestic Asset Protection Trusts (DAPTs) **Self-settled spendthrift trusts:** - Settlor (you) is also beneficiary - Generally not allowed (creditors can reach) - DAPT states allow - Specific procedures + waiting periods **DAPT states (~20):** - Alaska (first, 1997) - Delaware - Nevada - South Dakota - Wyoming - Tennessee - Utah - Several others **DAPT requirements:** - Specific state's law - ${s.name}-resident trustee or co-trustee - Specific spendthrift language - Statute of limitations periods - Specific court procedures - Some assets located in state **Effectiveness questioned:** - Conflict-of-laws issues - Other state's courts may not honor - Bankruptcy court may unwind - Limited Supreme Court guidance - 2023 case law nuances ## Foreign / offshore trusts **Offshore asset protection trusts:** - Cook Islands, Nevis, Cayman, Bahamas - Stronger statutes - Foreign courts won't enforce US judgments - Significant cost ($25K-$100K+ setup) - Annual fees - Compliance requirements (FBAR, Form 3520) - Significant scrutiny **Considerations:** - Reporting requirements increasingly strict - IRS focus - Limited to legitimate purposes - Compliance burden - Public scrutiny ## Spendthrift trusts (third-party) **Third-party spendthrift trust:** - Created by someone else for you - Trustee has discretion - Beneficiary's creditors limited - Almost universally enforced - Not the same as DAPT **Effective for:** - Inheritances - Gifts to children / grandchildren - Long-term protection across generations - Combined with estate-tax planning ## Insurance protection **Liability insurance:** - First line of defense - Auto, homeowners, professional - Umbrella policies (often inexpensive) - Higher limits = more protection - Inadequate insurance = personal exposure **Life insurance:** - Cash value (varies by state) - Death benefits (varies by state) - ILIT removes from estate **Annuities:** - Many states protect - ${s.name} specific rules - Different rules for self-purchased vs gifted ## Fraudulent transfer law — the limitation **Uniform Voidable Transactions Act (UVTA):** - Prevents transfers to avoid creditors - Adopted by most states (former UFTA) **Voidable transfers:** **1. Actual fraud:** - Intent to hinder, delay, defraud - 4-year statute (or 1 year from discovery) - Difficult to prove but harsh remedy **2. Constructive fraud:** - No fair value received - Insolvency at time of transfer - 4-year statute typically - Easier to prove **Badges of fraud:** - Transfer to insider - Retention of control - Concealment - Pending litigation - Substantially all assets - Insolvency - Reasonably equivalent value ## Bankruptcy considerations **Bankruptcy may unwind:** - Pre-petition transfers (1-10 years lookback) - Domestic Asset Protection Trusts (10-year lookback for self-settled) - Insider transactions - Fraudulent transfers **Pre-bankruptcy planning timing critical.** ## What CANNOT be protected **Limited / no protection from:** - IRS (federal tax obligations) - Federal criminal forfeiture - Child support / alimony (limited) - Some federal claims - Bankruptcy fraudulent transfers - Pre-existing claims (sometimes) - Tort claims arising from intentional conduct ## Common asset-protection structure **Layered approach:** 1. **Adequate insurance** (umbrella + standard) 2. **Maximize exemptions** (state + federal) 3. **Retirement accounts** (max contributions) 4. **Business entities** (LLCs for assets) 5. **Real estate in LLCs** (separate per property) 6. **Spendthrift trusts** (for next generation) 7. **DAPT or offshore** (for high-net-worth) 8. **Operating agreement / trust language** (planning) ## Cost considerations **Asset protection planning cost:** - Basic exemption planning: $500-$2,000 - LLC setup: $500-$2,500 each - Comprehensive plan: $5,000-$25,000 - DAPT: $10,000-$50,000 - Offshore trust: $25,000-$100,000+ - Annual maintenance: $1,000-$10,000+ **Cost-benefit analysis essential.** ## Common mistakes - **Procrastination** — protect before claim arises - **Inadequate insurance** — first line of defense - **DIY structures** — often ineffective / fraudulent - **Hiding assets** — illegal + voidable - **Not maintaining entities** — pierce the veil - **Commingling funds** — destroys protection - **Not coordinating with estate plan** — conflicts - **Ignoring tax consequences** — short-sighted - **Trusting marketing** — high-cost low-value ## What you should do If you're concerned about asset protection in Rhode Island: do BEFORE claims arise — post-claim planning is often voidable. Hire an experienced asset-protection attorney + CPA. Many Rhode Island estate-planning attorneys handle basic asset protection. For complex situations, look for asset-protection specialists. Cost-benefit analysis essential for higher-end strategies. --- *This guide is general information about Rhode Island + federal law as of mid-2026 and is not legal advice. Asset protection is technical + state-specific. Talk to a licensed Rhode Island attorney about your specific situation.*
This guide is for general information only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws change and outcomes depend on your specific situation — talk to a licensed attorney before acting on anything you read here.