Before proceeding, please review the legal disclaimer.
When setting up or managing a trust in Texas, it’s essential to understand the two primary roles involved: the trustee and the trustor. These roles are foundational to how trusts function, and knowing their differences is critical if you’re planning your estate, managing assets, or named in a trust document.
At The Lange Firm, we help Texas families and professionals build, administer, and protect trusts. This article will break down the trustee vs trustor distinction, explore their legal responsibilities, and explain how these roles operate in both revocable and irrevocable trusts.
A trust is a legal arrangement in which one party holds and manages property for the benefit of another. Trusts are commonly used for:
Avoiding probate
Protecting assets
Reducing estate taxes
Providing for minor children
Managing long-term care or special needs plans
Every trust involves at least three parties:
The Trustor (also called Grantor or Settlor)
The Trustee
The Beneficiary
Understanding each role helps clarify the function and legality of the trust agreement.
The trustor is the person who creates the trust. This individual:
Contributes property to the trust
Sets the rules and terms under which the trust operates
Chooses the trustee and beneficiaries
Retains some rights (in revocable trusts)
In revocable living trusts, the trustor often serves as their own trustee during life and names a successor trustee upon death or incapacity.
Common alternate terms for trustor include:
Grantor
Settlor
Creator
Example: A mother who sets up a trust to hold her home and savings for her children after she passes is the trustor.
The trustee is the person (or institution) who manages the trust according to its terms. Responsibilities include:
Administering assets
Filing taxes
Making distributions to beneficiaries
Ensuring legal compliance
Protecting the trust’s value
The trustee has a fiduciary duty—meaning they must act in the best interests of the beneficiaries and follow the terms of the trust precisely.
Trustees can be:
A trusted family member or friend
A financial advisor
An attorney
A corporate trustee or bank trust department
The Lange Firm offers guidance to both individual and corporate trustees to avoid breaches of fiduciary duty.
Feature | Trustor | Trustee |
---|---|---|
Role | Creates the trust | Manages the trust |
Rights | Sets terms, names parties | Administers trust assets |
Timing | Acts at creation | Acts during administration |
Fiduciary duty | None (unless also trustee) | Yes |
Ownership | Transfers property to the trust | Holds legal title to property |
Can be same person? | Yes, in revocable trusts | Yes, in revocable trusts |
In revocable living trusts, it’s common for the trustor and trustee to be the same individual—usually the person setting up the trust.
For example:
John sets up a living trust, names himself as trustee, and places his house and savings in the trust. Upon his death, his daughter becomes the successor trustee.
This structure gives the trustor full control over their assets during life while allowing for a smooth transfer after death.
However, in irrevocable trusts, the trustor generally cannot serve as trustee because:
The trustor must relinquish control
Trust assets no longer belong to the trustor
Doing so could nullify tax or asset protection benefits
In irrevocable trusts, the differences between trustee and trustor are more legally significant. Once the trust is established:
The trustor gives up control of the assets
The trustee must manage the assets strictly according to the trust terms
The trustor cannot make changes to the trust or reclaim assets
The trustee must often act independently to preserve trust validity
These are common in:
Medicaid planning
Asset protection
Special needs trusts
Life insurance trusts (ILITs)
Insert backlink here to: “Does a Trust Protect Assets?”
Yes, under certain conditions:
The trust may allow the trustor (or beneficiaries) to remove a trustee
A court can remove a trustee for misconduct, incapacity, or failure to perform
In revocable trusts, the trustor can typically replace the trustee at any time
It’s important that trust documents clearly outline the procedure for trustee resignation or removal.
Yes. In many family trusts, a trustee is also a beneficiary. For example:
A parent creates a trust for three children
One child is named trustee
All three children are equal beneficiaries
This is legal as long as the trustee still acts fairly and does not favor themselves over other beneficiaries.
To minimize conflict, many clients appoint neutral third-party trustees—especially in blended families or high-value estates.
Failing to distinguish these roles can lead to:
Conflicts of interest
Invalid trusts
Tax complications
Improper asset transfers
Probate litigation
The Lange Firm helps clients draft trust documents that clearly define the roles, rights, and duties of everyone involved.
We work with:
Individuals setting up revocable or irrevocable trusts
Families with special needs or blended dynamics
Trustees managing complex asset portfolios
Beneficiaries disputing mismanagement
Professionals serving as fiduciaries
Our team ensures your trust works as intended—now and in the future.
Understanding the roles of trustee vs trustor is essential for anyone creating, administering, or benefiting from a trust. Whether you’re managing a trust today or planning for tomorrow, clarity in these roles ensures smoother administration and fewer legal surprises.
📞 Contact The Lange Firm today for a free consultation about creating or managing a Texas trust the right way.
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Mr. Evan B. Lange is the attorney responsible for this website. | All meetings are by appointment only. | Principal place of business: Sugar Land, Texas.
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