Estate Planning · WV

Trust Administration in West Virginia

West Virginia trust administration is governed by Adopted UTC 2011. The trustee has fiduciary duties to manage assets prudently, account to beneficiaries, and distribute according to trust terms.

Published May 7, 2026
## Trust administration in West Virginia When the person who created a trust (the **settlor** or **grantor**) becomes incapacitated or dies, the **trustee** takes over — managing the trust's assets, paying its bills, and ultimately distributing what's left to beneficiaries. ### West Virginia trust law Adopted UTC 2011. ## The trustee's basic duties **1. Duty of loyalty.** Act solely in the beneficiaries' interests. No self-dealing without authorization. **2. Duty of care.** Manage trust assets with the prudence of a reasonable investor. Often called the "prudent investor rule." **3. Duty of impartiality.** Treat beneficiaries equitably (with consideration for their different roles — e.g., income beneficiaries vs remainder beneficiaries). **4. Duty to account / inform.** Keep beneficiaries informed about trust assets, transactions, and distributions. Periodic accountings (annual is common). **5. Duty to follow trust terms.** Distribute according to the trust document — neither more generous nor more restrictive. **6. Duty to diversify.** Modern portfolio theory generally requires diversification of investments. **7. Duty to make trust property productive.** Invest rather than letting cash sit idle. ## Initial steps after the settlor's death 1. **Locate the trust document** — original is preferred 2. **Identify successor trustee** — named in the trust 3. **Successor accepts trustee role** — typically by written acceptance 4. **Death certificate** — order multiple certified copies 5. **Identify beneficiaries** — review trust + most recent amendments 6. **Notify beneficiaries** — many states have statutory notice requirements (60-90 days) 7. **Obtain Tax ID** for trust (EIN) — replace settlor's SSN 8. **Inventory assets** — bank accounts, investments, real estate, personal property, business interests 9. **Secure assets** — change locks, mail forwarding, alarm systems 10. **Notify financial institutions** — change account ownership to trust under successor trustee ## Notice to beneficiaries Most state trust codes require notice within a defined period (60-90 days) of the trust becoming irrevocable (i.e., settlor's death). Notice typically must include: - Trust existence - Trustee identity + contact info - Right to request a copy of the trust - Time period to contest Failure to give proper notice can extend contest periods and create personal liability. ## Funding considerations If the settlor's revocable trust wasn't fully funded: - Assets in settlor's individual name need probate (with a pour-over will to dump them into trust) - Real estate may need new deeds or court orders - Beneficiary-designated accounts (life insurance, retirement) follow designations, not trust ## Tax considerations **Federal estate tax:** - Threshold ~$13.6M (2024) — most estates owe nothing - Form 706 due 9 months after death IF estate exceeds threshold - Portability election allows surviving spouse to use deceased's unused exemption **State estate tax** — applies in CT, HI, IL, ME, MD, MA, MN, NY, OR, RI, VT, WA, DC; thresholds much lower than federal in most **State inheritance tax** — applies in IA (phasing out), KY, MD (also estate), NE, NJ, PA **Federal income tax** — Form 1041 for the trust, generally calendar-year basis. K-1s issued to beneficiaries for distributions. **Step-up in basis** — assets generally get new tax basis at date of death; advantageous for beneficiaries. ## Distribution **Outright distributions:** - Easier to administer - Beneficiary gets immediate access - Loses creditor / divorce / Medicaid protection **Continuing trusts:** - For minors (until age 18 or older) - For beneficiaries with disabilities (special needs trusts) - For spendthrift protection - For estate-tax planning (dynasty / generation-skipping trusts) - Trustee continues managing under specified terms **Discretionary vs mandatory:** - Mandatory — "the trustee shall distribute X per year" - Discretionary — "the trustee may distribute as the trustee deems appropriate for support / education / health / maintenance" - HEMS (Health, Education, Maintenance, Support) is a common ascertainable standard ## Trustee compensation Trustees are entitled to reasonable compensation: - Family / individual trustees often serve without pay - Professional trustees charge — often 0.5-1.5% of trust assets annually - Trust document may specify ("reasonable," specific amount, percentage) - Some states have statutory schedules (CA, NY) ## Beneficiary disputes Common conflicts: - Trustee's investment decisions - Slow distributions - Self-dealing allegations - Family-business sale decisions - Distribution disputes between siblings - Removal-of-trustee petitions Most modern trust statutes require non-judicial dispute resolution attempts before litigation. ## When to hire help - **Always for complex trusts** — multi-generation, business interests, real estate in multiple states, tax issues - **For first-time trustees** — even simple trusts benefit from initial consultation - **For tax filings** — CPA familiar with trust returns - **For trustee disputes** — separate counsel for trustee vs beneficiaries when conflict arises ## What you should do If you've been named successor trustee in West Virginia: hire a trust attorney for initial setup AND a CPA for tax filings. Many West Virginia estate-planning attorneys offer flat-fee trust-administration packages that include the major early steps. The trustee's exposure for personal liability is real — getting it right matters. --- *This guide is general information about West Virginia law as of early 2026 and is not legal advice. Trust administration is technical and varies by state. Talk to a licensed West Virginia estate-planning attorney about your specific trust.*
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.