Most Floridians who think about trusts are thinking about a revocable living trust — a flexible, amendable document that avoids probate and coordinates their estate plan. Revocable trusts are excellent estate planning tools, but they have one fundamental limitation: because the grantor retains the right to revoke and control the trust, the assets inside it are treated as the grantor's assets for creditor protection, Medicaid, and estate tax purposes.
An irrevocable trust takes a different approach. By genuinely transferring control and ownership to the trust — with the grantor giving up the right to take assets back — the law treats those assets differently. This trade-off unlocks protections that are unavailable through any other estate planning tool.
Revocable vs. Irrevocable: The Fundamental Difference
| Feature | Revocable Living Trust | Irrevocable Trust |
|---|---|---|
| Can grantor modify or revoke? | Yes, at any time | Generally no (with limited exceptions) |
| Avoids probate | Yes | Yes |
| Creditor protection for grantor | No | Yes (if properly structured) |
| Medicaid asset exclusion | No | Yes (after 5-year look-back) |
| Reduces taxable estate | No | Yes |
| Grantor retains control | Full control | No direct control over assets |
| Most common use | Probate avoidance, privacy | Asset protection, Medicaid, estate tax, legacy |
Types of Florida Irrevocable Trusts
1. Medicaid Asset Protection Trust (MAPT)
A Medicaid Asset Protection Trust is designed for Floridians who want to protect assets — most often the family home and savings — from Medicaid's spend-down rules while still qualifying for long-term care benefits.
Under federal Medicaid rules (42 U.S.C. § 1396p), assets transferred to a MAPT are subject to a 60-month (5-year) look-back period. If the grantor applies for Medicaid within 5 years of transferring assets to the trust, a penalty period of ineligibility is imposed. But assets transferred more than 5 years before the application date are excluded from Medicaid's asset test entirely.
- The grantor cannot be their own beneficiary — assets must be held for others (typically adult children)
- The grantor may retain the right to income from the trust assets while alive
- The grantor may retain a limited power of appointment to redirect assets among beneficiaries
- The home may be retitled into the MAPT while the grantor retains a life estate in some structures
2. Domestic Asset Protection Trust (DAPT)
Florida's Domestic Asset Protection Trust (F.S. § 736.0505(3)) allows the grantor to be a discretionary beneficiary of an irrevocable trust — meaning the grantor can potentially benefit from the trust — while still protecting trust assets from future creditors.
Key requirements for a valid Florida DAPT:
- At least one qualified Florida co-trustee (not the grantor) who maintains Florida assets
- The trust must be irrevocable
- The grantor cannot have mandatory distribution rights — only discretionary access
- Assets must be held for a minimum of 4 years to be protected from most creditors (the "seasoning period")
- Transfers cannot be made with intent to defraud existing creditors (F.S. § 726.105)
3. Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust (ILIT)
Under IRC § 2042, life insurance proceeds are included in the insured's gross estate if the insured holds "incidents of ownership" — including the right to change the beneficiary, borrow against the policy, or surrender it. If you own a $2 million life insurance policy and your estate already approaches the federal exemption threshold ($13.99 million per person in 2025, $27.98 million for married couples), those proceeds could push your estate into federal estate tax territory.
An Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust (ILIT) solves this by:
- Owning the life insurance policy — removing it from your gross estate
- Distributing proceeds to beneficiaries estate-tax-free at your death
- Providing liquidity for your estate (heirs can use ILIT proceeds to pay estate taxes or buy illiquid assets from the estate)
- Protecting insurance proceeds from beneficiaries' creditors within the trust
4. Charitable Remainder Trust (CRT)
A Charitable Remainder Trust allows you to transfer appreciated assets — often stock, real estate, or a business interest — into a trust, sell those assets inside the trust without immediately recognizing capital gains, and receive an income stream for your lifetime (or a term of years) while leaving the remaining principal to charity at your death. Key benefits include:
- Immediate charitable income tax deduction for the present value of the charitable remainder
- Capital gains deferral on the sale of appreciated assets inside the trust
- Income stream (annuity or unitrust payment) for the grantor's lifetime
- Reduction of the taxable estate by the full value transferred
5. Spousal Lifetime Access Trust (SLAT)
A Spousal Lifetime Access Trust allows one spouse to make a completed gift to an irrevocable trust — removing the assets from both spouses' taxable estates — while the other spouse remains a discretionary beneficiary. The trust assets are out of the grantor spouse's estate, but the beneficiary spouse can receive distributions, providing indirect access to the funds if needed.
SLATs are particularly powerful in 2025 while the federal estate tax exemption remains historically high. With the sunset of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, the exemption is scheduled to revert to approximately $7 million per person (inflation-adjusted) after December 31, 2025. Assets transferred to a SLAT while the high exemption is in effect are permanently removed from the estate — even if the exemption later decreases.
6. Special Needs Trust
A Special Needs Trust (SNT) preserves assets for a disabled beneficiary without disqualifying them from means-tested government benefits such as SSI and Medicaid. For more information, see our Florida Special Needs Trust guide.
Can a Florida Irrevocable Trust Be Modified?
"Irrevocable" does not mean completely unchangeable. Florida law provides several pathways for modifying an irrevocable trust when circumstances change:
- Nonjudicial modification (F.S. § 736.04113) — With consent of all qualified beneficiaries and the trustee, many modifications can be made without court approval
- Judicial modification (F.S. § 736.04115) — A court may modify an irrevocable trust if its purposes have become impractical, wasteful, or impossible to achieve
- Decanting (F.S. § 736.04117) — A trustee with discretionary distribution authority may "pour" trust assets into a new trust with different terms — effectively rewriting the trust without court involvement in many cases
- Trustee removal and replacement — Beneficiaries may have rights to replace a trustee under the trust instrument or under F.S. § 736.0706
Tax Treatment of Florida Irrevocable Trusts
The tax treatment of an irrevocable trust depends on how it is structured:
- Grantor trust (IRC §§ 671–679) — Trust income is taxed to the grantor personally, even though assets are outside the estate. This is intentional in some planning strategies (like SLATs) because it allows the grantor to pay the trust's tax bill — effectively making tax-free gifts to the trust each year
- Non-grantor trust — Trust files its own tax return (Form 1041). Trust income is taxed inside the trust at compressed rates — the top 37% federal rate is reached at just $15,650 of income in 2025
- Charitable trusts — CRTs are generally tax-exempt entities; the income taxation to the beneficiary follows a tiered ordering rule
Frequently Asked Questions
Explore Whether an Irrevocable Trust Belongs in Your Plan
Irrevocable trusts are powerful tools — but only if structured correctly for your specific goals. Cornerstone Wealth & Legacy Law designs irrevocable trust strategies for asset protection, Medicaid planning, estate tax reduction, and legacy planning throughout Florida.
Start Your Estate Plan →This article is for general informational purposes and does not constitute legal advice. Irrevocable trust planning is highly fact-specific and depends on your individual tax situation, estate size, creditor exposure, and long-term care needs. Consult a licensed Florida attorney and tax advisor before establishing any irrevocable trust. Arthur Simpson, Esq. is licensed to practice law in the State of Florida.