Every week, Canadians who recently moved from the US or who watched American estate-planning content ask the same question: “Should I set up a revocable trust?” The Canadian answer is almost always no — and the reason is a key difference in tax law that nobody explains. Here’s why.
The US revocable trust: what it does
In the United States, a “revocable living trust” is a standard estate-planning tool. You set up the trust during your life, transfer your assets into it, and name yourself as the trustee. You keep full control — you can change beneficiaries, take assets back out, or dissolve it entirely.
Why Americans use them: to avoid probate (which can be very expensive in California, Florida, and similar states), to keep estate affairs private (probated wills become public records), and to provide for incapacity (a successor trustee takes over if you become unable to manage your affairs).
Why it doesn’t work in Canada: attribution rules
Section 75(2) of the Canadian Income Tax Act says: if you transfer property to a trust and you retain the right to take it back, or to direct who gets it, ALL income and capital gains generated by that property are attributed back to YOU and taxed in your hands.
Translation: if you set up a Canadian “revocable” trust, every dividend, interest payment, and capital gain inside it lands on YOUR personal tax return. The trust is essentially invisible for tax purposes — you might as well not have bothered.
What Canada uses instead
For probate avoidance: simpler tools
- Joint ownership with right of survivorship — your home, joint bank accounts, joint investment accounts all bypass probate on first death
- Beneficiary designations — RRSP, RRIF, TFSA, life insurance, pension, FHSA all transfer directly to named beneficiaries
- Multiple wills (Ontario specifically) — primary will + secondary will, the secondary doesn’t go through probate
These three tools combined typically eliminate probate on 70-90% of a middle-class Canadian estate. Probate fees in most provinces ($0-$15K) are way less than US states ($20-100K), reducing the urgency.
For incapacity planning: powers of attorney
Canada uses two separate powers of attorney: one for property (financial decisions) and one for personal care (medical, living arrangements). These handle the “what if I become incapacitated” problem without needing a trust structure.
For privacy: most Canadian estates are already private enough
Probated wills in Canada are technically public records, but in practice nobody requests them outside of journalism or estate disputes. Canada has nothing like the celebrity-estate-tabloid culture that drives American privacy concerns.
When Canada DOES use trusts (all irrevocable)
- Family trust — irrevocable, discretionary; income splitting (heavily restricted since 2018 TOSI rules) + estate freezes for business succession
- Alter ego trust — 65+ solo, transfers all your assets to a trust during life; bypasses probate at death; covered in our alter ego trust guide
- Joint partner trust — same as alter ego but with a spouse
- Spousal trust — usually created by will; provides for surviving spouse; defers tax until spouse’s death
- Testamentary trust — created by your will; takes effect at death; controls how/when minor children or vulnerable beneficiaries receive their inheritance
The cost of Canadian trusts
- Setup: $3,000-$8,000 in legal fees for a properly drafted trust
- Annual administration: $1,500-$5,000 for trust tax returns (T3 form) and accounting
- 21-year deemed disposition: capital gains tax bill every 21 years, calculated as if all trust assets sold
For most middle-class Canadians ($500K-$1M total estate), trusts aren’t worth the cost. They start making economic sense above ~$2M in estate value where the tax savings exceed the administration costs.
The newcomer trap
If you moved to Canada from the US with a revocable trust still in place, you have a problem. Once you become a Canadian tax resident, the trust’s tax treatment changes — CRA may treat it as a foreign trust subject to T1142 reporting + harsh deemed-distribution rules. Most cross-border tax accountants recommend collapsing US revocable trusts BEFORE establishing Canadian residency, then setting up Canadian-appropriate structures after arrival.
A friend who relocated from California in 2019 brought her family’s revocable trust with her. Two years of T1142 filings (foreign trust reporting), CRA inquiries, and cross-border accountant fees later, she collapsed it and set up a Canadian alter ego trust instead. The total mistake cost her about $14,000 in professional fees that wouldn’t have been needed if she’d unwound the US trust before her landing date.
Frequently asked questions
Can I make a Canadian trust partially revocable?
No — even partial revocability or partial control triggers attribution rules. The trust must be fully irrevocable for the tax structure to work properly. You can include emergency-distribution clauses for beneficiaries, but the settlor cannot retain reversion rights.
Is a Canadian “alter ego trust” the same as a US revocable trust?
Close but not identical. An alter ego trust gives a 65+ Canadian the ability to: receive all trust income during life, retain control via being sole trustee, transfer assets in tax-free (special rollover provision), bypass probate. But you CANNOT take assets back to your personal name — that’s where the irrevocability still applies. The practical effect is similar to a US revocable trust though.
What’s the simplest probate-avoidance alternative?
For most Canadian couples: joint ownership of the principal residence + named beneficiaries on every registered account and life insurance policy. This trio bypasses probate on 70-90% of typical estate value. Cost: $0. Time: 30 minutes. Effective: handles the same problems a US revocable trust solves for most middle-class American estates.
Do I need a trust if I have a will?
For most Canadians, a will + beneficiary designations + joint ownership is enough. Trusts add value when: you have a vulnerable beneficiary (disabled adult, addict, spendthrift), you own a business and want to plan succession with an estate freeze, your estate is large enough ($2M+) that probate + tax savings justify the administration costs, or you have minor children and want controlled inheritance distribution.
Can I set up a trust myself?
Technically yes; practically no. Trust deeds need to be carefully drafted to avoid CRA attribution issues, ensure 21-year rule planning is workable, and comply with provincial trust law. DIY trust mistakes are expensive to fix — often more expensive than the original legal fees would have been. Use an estate lawyer. The $3-8K setup cost is small relative to the value of the structure if it’s done right.
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