Trust Administration in California: A Complete Guide
If you were just named successor trustee, or you’re a beneficiary trying to figure out what a trustee actually owes you, you’re probably staring at a process with no obvious starting line. Trust administration is the legal work of carrying out a trust after the person who created it dies: gathering assets, paying debts and taxes, sending required notices, and eventually distributing what’s left. Most straightforward administrations take twelve to eighteen months. It happens outside probate court in most cases, but it isn’t informal, and a trustee who misses a deadline or mishandles an account can end up personally liable to the people the trust was meant to protect.
This page is the map. Below is every guide we’ve written on trust administration in California, organized by the situation you’re actually in. Find your section and start reading.
Successor Trustee Duties
Start here if you’ve just been named trustee and need to know what the job requires, day to day and start to finish.
- What Does a Successor Trustee Do in California – the full breakdown of a trustee’s responsibilities from appointment to final distribution.
- Successor Trustee Checklist: First 30 Days in California – recording the death certificate, securing assets, getting an EIN, and sending the required statutory notice.
- How Long Does Trust Administration Take in California – a realistic timeline broken down by phase, and what stretches it out.
- Trustee Compensation in California – how trustee pay gets calculated when the trust is silent, and how to document it.
- Trustee Personal Liability in California – when a trustee’s own assets are on the line for mistakes made administering the trust.
- Trustee Accounting Requirements in California – what a compliant accounting has to include and how often it’s due.
Trustee Disputes and Removal
For beneficiaries who suspect mismanagement, and trustees facing a fight they didn’t start.
- How to Remove a Trustee in California – the process and standard courts apply before pulling someone out of the role.
- How to Remove a Co-Trustee in California – what happens when one of two or more trustees needs to go but the others don’t.
- Grounds for Trustee Removal Under Probate Code § 15642 – the statutory list courts use to decide whether removal is warranted.
- Trustee Breach of Fiduciary Duty in California – what counts as a breach and what a beneficiary can recover.
- Surcharge Actions Against a Trustee in California – how beneficiaries recover losses the trust suffered from a trustee’s misconduct.
- Beneficiary Rights Under a California Trust – the baseline protections every beneficiary has, regardless of how the administration is going.
- Compelling a Trust Accounting in California – the remedy when a trustee won’t turn over financial records on request.
Trust Modification and Decanting
Trusts aren’t always frozen in place. Here’s when and how they can be changed after the fact.
- Trust Modification After Death in California – the general framework for changing an irrevocable trust’s terms.
- Trust Decanting in California – moving assets from an existing trust into a new one with different terms.
- Petition to Modify an Irrevocable Trust Under §§ 15403-15404 – the court process for changing trust terms when consent alone isn’t enough.
- Can Beneficiaries Change a Trust in California – when unanimous beneficiary agreement is enough to modify a trust without a judge.
- Reforming a Trust for Tax Purposes in California – the narrower path courts allow when the goal is fixing a tax problem, not rewriting the plan.
Creditor Claims
Death doesn’t erase debt. Here’s how creditors reach trust assets, and what protects against it.
- Creditor Claims Against a Trust in California – how the claims process works and what the trustee has to do about it.
- Spendthrift Trust Creditor Protection in California – how far a spendthrift provision actually shields a beneficiary’s interest.
- Notice to Creditors for a Trust in California – the trustee’s affirmative obligation to notify known and potential creditors.
- IRS Lien on Trust Property in California – what happens when the federal government has a claim against trust assets.
- Medi-Cal Recovery Against a Trust in California – the state’s right of reimbursement and how it reaches trust property.
Taxes, Step-Up, and Prop 19
Trust administration carries real tax consequences, especially around inherited real property.
- Stepped-Up Basis in a California Trust – how trust assets get revalued at death and why it matters when beneficiaries sell.
- Community Property Step-Up vs. Separate Property in California – why community property gets a full step-up and separate property usually doesn’t.
- Prop 19 Parent-Child Exclusion in California – the narrowed exclusion for transfers between parents and children after 2020.
- Prop 19 and Inherited Property Tax Reassessment in California – what happens to the property tax bill when the exclusion doesn’t apply.
- How to File for the Prop 19 Exclusion in California – the paperwork, deadlines, and county process.
- Capital Gains on Inherited Property in California – how gain is calculated when a beneficiary sells inherited real estate.
- Date-of-Death Appraisal in California – why the valuation date matters and how to get it right.
Community vs. Separate Property
California is a community property state, and that status follows assets into a trust.
- Community Property vs. Separate Property in Trust Administration – the foundational distinction and why it drives everything downstream.
- Characterizing Assets After Death in California – how a trustee actually determines whether an asset is community or separate.
- Transmutation Agreements and Trust Assets in California – when spouses changed an asset’s character during marriage, and how that follows the asset into administration.
- Commingled Assets in Trust Administration in California – sorting out separate and community funds that have been mixed together.
- Surviving Spouse Rights in Trust Administration in California – the specific statutory protections a surviving spouse has.
Capacity, Dementia, and Elder Abuse
Some of the hardest cases involve a trust or amendment signed when someone was losing capacity, or under pressure from someone close to them.
- Challenging a Trust Amendment for Lack of Capacity in California – what it takes to prove a trust document was signed without the legal capacity to do so.
- Dementia and Undue Influence in Trust Disputes – how a diagnosis interacts with the legal question of capacity and influence.
- Undue Influence Under Probate Code § 86 – the statutory definition courts use to decide whether influence crossed the line.
- Financial Elder Abuse and Trust Contests in California – when a trust dispute overlaps with a financial elder abuse claim.
- Signs a Trust Was Changed Under Duress in California – practical red flags for family members who think something’s wrong.
- Presumption of Undue Influence Under Probate Code § 21380 – the relationships, like caregiver to client, that shift the burden of proof automatically.
- Conservatorship vs. Trust Administration in California – how these two tracks differ when someone is still alive but losing capacity.
Trust Contests
A trust contest challenges the validity of the trust or an amendment itself, not just how it’s being administered.
- How to Contest a Trust in California – the starting point for anyone considering a challenge, and what grounds actually hold up.
- No-Contest Clauses in California Trusts – how these provisions work and when they actually penalize a beneficiary who loses.
- Statute of Limitations for a Trust Contest in California – the deadlines that can end a case before it’s heard on the merits.
- Trust Contest vs. Will Contest in California – how the two share legal DNA but differ procedurally.
- Undue Influence vs. Lack of Capacity in California – the two theories that come up in nearly every contest, and how they’re different.
Real Property
Real estate is usually the most valuable and most complicated asset a trustee has to move.
- Transferring Real Property Out of a Trust in California – the general process for moving title from the trust to a beneficiary.
- Affidavit of Death of Trustee in California – the recording tool used when the original trustee held title and has now died.
- Trust Transfer Deed After Death in California – how title actually moves to the successor trustee or to beneficiaries.
- Selling Trust Property in California – what a trustee needs before listing and closing on a trust-owned property.
- Prop 19 and Selling Inherited Property in California – how a sale can trigger a reassessment beneficiaries didn’t see coming.
Distribution and Closing
The final phase is where a trustee’s earlier work either pays off or creates liability.
- How to Distribute Trust Assets in California – the mechanics of getting assets from the trust to the people named to receive them.
- Trustee Liability After Distribution in California – why a trustee isn’t automatically off the hook once checks go out.
- Reserve for Taxes Before Distribution in California – why prudent trustees hold funds back before making a final distribution.
- Trust Distribution Disputes in California – what happens when beneficiaries disagree about the amount or timing of what they’re owed.
- Closing a Trust: Final Steps in California – the paperwork that formally ends the trustee’s role.
Specialized Situations
A handful of situations don’t fit neatly into the categories above but come up often enough to deserve their own guide.
- Heggstad Petition in California – bringing an asset into the trust without a full probate when it was never properly funded.
- Probate Code § 850 Petition in California – the broader petition tool the Heggstad petition is built on.
- Trust Administration vs. Probate in California – a side-by-side comparison of timelines, cost, and court involvement.
- QTIP Trust Administration in California – administering a trust built for a surviving spouse under the marital deduction.
- Special Needs Trust Administration in California – coordinating distributions carefully when a beneficiary has disabilities.
- Generation-Skipping Trust Administration in California – the added layer for larger estates involving gifts to grandchildren or later generations.
- Trustee’s Duty to Inform and Account Under §§ 16060-16064 – the baseline reporting obligation every trustee has, in every administration.
- What Happens When a Trustee Dies in California – how the next person in line takes over mid-administration.
- Co-Trustee Deadlock in California – what to do when co-trustees can’t agree and the administration stalls.
- Irrevocable Trust After Death vs. During Life in California – how the rules differ depending on whether the person who created the trust is still living.
Talk to Eric
California trust administration carries real deadlines, real fiduciary exposure, and real tax consequences. A trustee who gets it wrong, even by accident, can end up personally liable. A beneficiary who doesn’t know their rights can watch an estate get mismanaged without ever knowing there was a way to stop it.
If you’ve been named trustee, think a trust is being mismanaged, or just need to know where you stand as a beneficiary, I’ll walk through it with you in plain English.
Talk to Eric Ridley – a free 60-minute consultation by phone or Zoom, anywhere in California. Or call (805) 244-5291.
This is general information about California law, not legal advice for your situation.
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