Florida Real Estate & Estate Planning

Florida Land Trust:
Anonymous Property Ownership & How It Works

A Florida land trust keeps your name off public property records, avoids probate on your real estate, and makes ownership transfers seamless — all without changing your day-to-day control. Here is what every Florida property owner and investor needs to know.

By Arthur Simpson, Esq. Florida Estate Planning & Real Estate Attorney Last Updated: May 2025

If you own Florida real estate, your name, address, and purchase price are public record — visible to anyone who searches the county property appraiser's website. For investors, business owners, professionals, and high-net-worth individuals, this public exposure creates real risks: solicitation, targeting by litigants, and negotiating disadvantages in future acquisitions.

A Florida land trust is a simple, well-established legal tool that solves this problem. It has been part of Florida law for decades, is codified under F.S. § 689.071 (the Florida Land Trust Act), and is widely used by sophisticated real estate investors, developers, and estate planning attorneys throughout the state.

What Is a Florida Land Trust?

A Florida land trust is a revocable trust in which a trustee holds legal title to real property. The beneficiary — the true owner — retains full control over the property: the right to use it, sell it, lease it, encumber it, and direct the trustee in all matters. The beneficiary also receives all economic benefits (rental income, sale proceeds, appreciation).

The critical distinction: the beneficiary's identity is never recorded. Only the trustee's name appears on the deed filed in the public record. The beneficial interest agreement — which identifies the beneficiary and their rights — is a private document held outside of public records.

Key Statute: F.S. § 689.071 — Florida Land Trust Act Florida's Land Trust Act expressly recognizes land trusts as valid legal structures, confirms that beneficiary interests are personal property (not real property) for legal purposes, and establishes the rights and duties of trustees and beneficiaries. A trustee can act on behalf of the trust without disclosing the beneficiary's identity.

The Five Core Benefits of a Florida Land Trust

1. Privacy — Your Name Off the Public Record

Florida property records are fully searchable online. Anyone — a prospective buyer looking to lowball you, a plaintiff's attorney, a business competitor — can find every property you own by searching your name. With a land trust, the deed shows the trustee's name (often a professional trustee or an LLC formed for this purpose). Your name does not appear.

This anonymity is especially valuable when acquiring property: sellers cannot research your portfolio, identify your buying patterns, or inflate prices based on your perceived wealth.

2. Probate Avoidance for Real Property

Real property owned in your individual name must pass through Florida probate at your death — a court-supervised process that typically takes 9 to 18 months and costs 3% to 5% of the estate's value in legal and court fees. Property held in a land trust does not pass through your probate estate because the trustee holds legal title. The beneficial interest transfers according to the trust agreement, privately and without court involvement.

3. Simplified Ownership Transfers

Transferring beneficial interest in a land trust does not require recording a new deed. Instead, the parties execute a transfer of beneficial interest — a private document that is never filed with the county. This avoids documentary stamp taxes on the transfer in many cases, eliminates title search costs for routine transfers between related parties, and keeps the chain of title clean on the public record.

4. Multi-Party Ownership Without Complications

When multiple investors co-own a property, disputes over management, forced partition, and probate complications are common. A land trust can hold multiple beneficial interests clearly defined in the trust agreement — spelling out voting rights, distribution rights, and buy-sell procedures — without any of this appearing on the public record.

5. Estate Planning Flexibility

A land trust integrates seamlessly with your broader estate plan. The beneficial interest can be assigned to your revocable living trust, making the land trust property part of your overall estate plan while maintaining the anonymity and probate avoidance benefits of the land trust structure. You can name successor beneficiaries directly in the trust agreement.

How a Florida Land Trust Is Structured

The Key Parties

Every Florida land trust involves three roles (though the same person may play multiple roles in some cases):

How a Land Trust Is Created

  1. Draft the land trust agreement — prepared by an attorney, identifies the trustee, the property, and the beneficiary's rights
  2. Execute a deed — transferring the property from the current owner to the trustee "as Trustee under Land Trust Agreement dated [date]"
  3. Record the deed — filed with the county clerk; shows only the trustee's name
  4. Execute the beneficial interest agreement — private document, not recorded, identifies the beneficiary and their rights
  5. Assign beneficial interest (optional) — the beneficiary may assign their interest to an LLC or living trust for additional protection or estate planning integration

Land Trust + LLC: The Investor Stack

Florida real estate investors frequently combine a land trust with an LLC for maximum privacy and liability protection:

This dual-layer structure separates privacy (land trust layer) from liability protection (LLC layer) and is widely used by Florida real estate investors who own multiple properties.

⚠ Land Trusts Do Not Provide Creditor Protection A common misconception: a Florida land trust does not shield your equity from creditors. A creditor who obtains a judgment against you can still reach your beneficial interest in the land trust. Privacy (your name is not on the deed) is not the same as protection (your creditor cannot touch the asset). For creditor protection, the LLC or an irrevocable trust structure is needed in addition to — or instead of — the land trust.

Florida Land Trust vs. Other Ownership Structures

FeatureIndividual OwnershipLand TrustLLCRevocable Living Trust
Avoids probateNoYesYesYes
Name off public recordNoYesPartialNo
Creditor protectionNoNoYes (charging order)No
Simple transfer of interestNoYes (no new deed)Yes (membership transfer)No
Homestead eligibleYesYes (if properly structured)NoYes
Due-on-sale riskN/ALow (F.S. § 689.071 protection)ModerateLow
Annual filing/costNoneTrustee fee$138.75/yr Annual ReportNone (after setup)

Homestead and the Florida Land Trust

Florida's homestead exemption — both the ad valorem tax exemption and the creditor protection — can be preserved when property is held in a land trust, but the structure must be done correctly:

Transferring homestead property to a land trust where an LLC is the beneficiary will likely disqualify the homestead exemption. This is a critical planning point that requires attorney guidance.

The Due-on-Sale Clause Question

Most mortgage loans contain a due-on-sale clause requiring the lender's consent before transferring the property. Technically, placing property into a land trust triggers this clause. However, F.S. § 689.071(7) and the federal Garn-St. Germain Depository Institutions Act of 1982 both provide protections for transfers into revocable trusts where the borrower remains the beneficiary and occupies the property as their principal residence.

For investment properties (non-owner-occupied), the protection is more limited. In practice, lenders rarely call loans due when property is transferred into a land trust, but this is a risk to discuss with your attorney before proceeding.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a Florida land trust?
A Florida land trust is a revocable trust under F.S. § 689.071 in which a trustee holds title to real property while the beneficiary retains all control and economic rights. The beneficiary's identity is never recorded — only the trustee's name appears on the public deed. This provides anonymity, avoids probate, and simplifies transfers of ownership.
Does a Florida land trust keep my name off public records?
Yes. The deed recorded with the county shows only the trustee's name — not the beneficiary's. The beneficial interest agreement, which identifies you as the true owner, is a private document that is never filed in the public record. Anyone searching property records will see the trustee's name, not yours.
Does a Florida land trust avoid probate?
Yes. Because the trustee holds legal title, the property does not pass through the beneficiary's probate estate at death. Ownership transfers privately according to the trust agreement — no court, no waiting period, no public record of the transfer. This makes land trusts an effective probate avoidance tool for Florida real estate.
Can a Florida land trust protect assets from creditors?
No. A Florida land trust does not provide creditor protection. A judgment creditor can still reach a beneficiary's interest in a land trust. Privacy (your name is off the deed) is not the same as protection. For asset protection, an LLC named as the beneficiary, combined with the land trust for privacy, provides a stronger structure — though the LLC's charging order protection applies to the membership interest, not the underlying real estate directly.
How much does it cost to set up a Florida land trust?
Setup typically involves attorney fees for drafting the land trust agreement and deed, plus recording fees (approximately $10–$20 per page at the county clerk). Ongoing costs include a trustee fee if you use a professional trustee — often $200–$500 per year per property. For investors with multiple properties, the privacy and estate planning benefits typically far outweigh these costs.

Related Reading

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This article is for general informational purposes and does not constitute legal advice. Land trust planning is highly fact-specific and depends on your individual circumstances, mortgage terms, and estate planning goals. Consult a licensed Florida attorney before establishing a land trust. Arthur Simpson, Esq. is licensed to practice law in the State of Florida.