You want your children to benefit from Bitcoin. The question is whether you hand them a loaded weapon at 18 or build a structure that protects, educates, and distributes on your terms — across decades and generations. A properly designed Bitcoin trust for children is the difference between a windfall your kid blows in six months and a family endowment that compounds for a century. This is the complete guide to setting one up right.
Here is the fundamental problem: minors cannot legally own significant assets. A child under 18 cannot sign contracts, open brokerage accounts, or manage property in their own name. If you die and your will says "leave my Bitcoin to my daughter," a court will appoint a conservator to manage those assets until she turns 18 — a process that is expensive, public, and governed by a judge who has never met your family and knows nothing about Bitcoin.
And then your daughter turns 18 and receives everything. All of it. No conditions, no restrictions, no oversight. Whatever amount of Bitcoin you accumulated — $50,000, $500,000, $5 million — is now in the unrestricted control of a teenager. The law does not care that she is not ready. The transfer is irrevocable.
This is not a hypothetical risk. It is the default outcome under intestacy laws in all 50 states and under any will that names a minor as a direct beneficiary without trust provisions.
A trust solves every one of these problems:
The cost of establishing a trust — $2,000 to $15,000 depending on complexity — is trivial relative to the potential loss from an unstructured transfer. If Bitcoin is worth $100,000 or more at your child's maturity, a trust is not optional. It is the minimum responsible structure.
There are four primary trust structures used to pass Bitcoin to children. Each has distinct legal mechanics, tax treatment, and control provisions. The right choice depends on the amount of Bitcoin, your control objectives, and whether you want the trust to span one generation or many.
A trust specifically designed for minors under the Internal Revenue Code. Income and principal can be distributed for the child's benefit during minority. The trust must distribute — or offer the right to distribute — all assets to the beneficiary at age 21. Gifts qualify for the annual exclusion without Crummey withdrawal notices.
The §2503(c) trust is the simplest trust option for minor children. Its primary appeal is that gifts qualify for the $19,000 annual exclusion automatically — you do not need to send Crummey withdrawal notices each year. The trustee has full discretion to distribute income and principal for the child's benefit during minority, which covers education expenses, medical costs, and other needs.
The critical limitation is the age-21 distribution requirement. When the beneficiary turns 21, the trust must either distribute all assets or give the beneficiary a window (typically 30–60 days) to demand full distribution. If the beneficiary does not exercise that right within the window, the trust can continue on its existing terms — but the beneficiary had a legally enforceable right to take everything. For a Bitcoin position that has grown to $200,000 or $2 million by age 21, this is a meaningful risk. Most 21-year-olds will exercise the withdrawal right.
Best for: Moderate Bitcoin gifts where you are comfortable with your child potentially accessing the full amount at 21. Typical use case: $10,000–$75,000 in current Bitcoin value, where the simplicity of administration outweighs the age-21 limitation.
An irrevocable trust where each annual gift triggers a limited withdrawal right for the beneficiary (or their guardian). The withdrawal right makes the gift a "present interest," qualifying for the annual exclusion. If the beneficiary does not exercise the withdrawal right within the window (typically 30 days), the funds remain in trust under the terms you designed — with no mandatory distribution at any age.
The Crummey trust is the workhorse structure for parents who want annual exclusion gifting without the age-21 forced distribution of a §2503(c) trust. The key mechanism: each time you contribute Bitcoin (or cash to purchase Bitcoin) to the trust, you send the beneficiary (or their legal guardian if the beneficiary is a minor) a written notice of their right to withdraw the contribution within a defined window — typically 30 days. If the beneficiary does not exercise the withdrawal right, the contribution remains locked in the trust under whatever distribution terms you designed.
The Crummey notice is not a formality. The IRS has challenged trusts where the withdrawal right was illusory — where the beneficiary could not realistically exercise it because they did not know about it, could not access the funds, or were pressured not to withdraw. Keep meticulous records: date of contribution, date notice was sent, beneficiary/guardian who received it, withdrawal window dates, and confirmation of lapse. This documentation is the most commonly audited element of Crummey trust administration.
Best for: Bitcoin positions of $25,000–$500,000 where you want flexible distribution timing and annual exclusion gifting. The Crummey trust is more expensive to set up ($3,000–$8,000) and requires annual administrative discipline, but the freedom to set distribution ages at 25, 30, 35 — or never — makes it the right structure when the §2503(c)'s age-21 distribution is unacceptable.
A perpetual or near-perpetual irrevocable trust designed to hold assets across multiple generations without triggering estate or generation-skipping transfer (GST) tax. Sited in a trust-friendly jurisdiction — Wyoming or South Dakota — for maximum duration, zero state income tax on trust gains, and strong creditor protection. Your child is the first beneficiary; their children and grandchildren are remainder beneficiaries.
The dynasty trust is the optimal structure for significant Bitcoin holdings intended to span generations. You are not merely giving your child Bitcoin — you are establishing a family endowment that compounds tax-free, distributes on your terms, and protects against creditors, divorcing spouses, and poor decisions across every future generation.
Wyoming and South Dakota are the two premier jurisdictions for dynasty trusts. Both offer perpetual trust duration (no Rule Against Perpetuities), zero state income tax on trust income and gains, directed trust statutes (allowing you to separate investment direction from administrative trusteeship), and strong domestic asset protection trust (DAPT) statutes. The choice between them is largely a matter of trustee preference and fee structure. For a detailed comparison, see our guide to choosing the best state for your Bitcoin trust.
The GST exemption is the dynasty trust's most powerful tax feature. You allocate your generation-skipping transfer tax exemption ($13.99 million per person in 2025, indexed) to the trust at funding. Once allocated, the entire trust — including all future appreciation — is permanently sheltered from GST tax. Fund a dynasty trust with $500,000 of Bitcoin and allocate GST exemption. If that Bitcoin grows to $50 million over 30 years, the entire $50 million can distribute to grandchildren and great-grandchildren with zero GST tax. The exemption was locked in at the $500,000 funding amount.
Best for: Bitcoin positions exceeding $250,000, or any amount where multi-generational transfer is the goal. The dynasty trust is the most expensive to establish and maintain, but it is the only structure that matches Bitcoin's time horizon — decades to centuries — with the legal architecture to protect and distribute wealth across that timeframe.
A trust you create during your lifetime that you can modify or revoke at any time. You remain the trustee and beneficiary during your life. At your death, the trust becomes irrevocable and distributes to your children according to the terms you specified. The trust assets remain in your taxable estate — no estate tax benefit — but the trust avoids probate, provides management during incapacity, and specifies distribution terms for your children.
The revocable living trust is not a wealth transfer tool — it is a management and probate-avoidance tool. You keep full control of your Bitcoin during your lifetime. You can add, remove, or modify trust terms at will. At your death, the trust becomes irrevocable and your successor trustee distributes Bitcoin to your children according to the schedule you designed.
The primary advantage over a simple will: probate avoidance. A will must go through probate court — a public, time-consuming, and often expensive process. A revocable trust distributes directly to beneficiaries without court involvement. For Bitcoin, this matters: probate proceedings are public record, which means the amount and nature of your Bitcoin holdings become publicly accessible. A trust keeps that information private.
The primary advantage over an irrevocable trust: the stepped-up basis. Because revocable trust assets remain in your taxable estate, your children receive a stepped-up cost basis at your death. If you purchased Bitcoin at $5,000 and it is worth $500,000 at your death, your children's cost basis is $500,000 — they owe zero capital gains tax if they sell immediately. This can be worth more than the estate tax savings of an irrevocable trust, depending on the amounts involved and the applicable exemption.
Best for: Parents who want to maintain full control of their Bitcoin during life, avoid probate, and specify distribution terms for children — but whose estates are below the federal exemption threshold (currently ~$14 million per person) and therefore face no estate tax exposure. Also an excellent "first step" that can pour over into a dynasty trust at death.
The distribution schedule is the most consequential decision in your trust document. It determines when, how much, and under what conditions your children access Bitcoin that could be worth life-changing sums. Get this wrong and you have either an overly restrictive trust that breeds resentment or an overly permissive one that funds bad decisions.
The most common and time-tested approach is staged distributions tied to age milestones:
Some parents prefer milestone distributions tied to achievements rather than (or in addition to) age:
The Health, Education, Maintenance, and Support (HEMS) standard is the most commonly used distribution standard in trust law. It gives the trustee discretion to distribute funds for these specific purposes at any time, regardless of the age-based schedule. HEMS provides a safety net: if your child faces a medical emergency, needs educational funding, or requires support, the trustee can act immediately without waiting for a milestone.
HEMS is also a tax term. A distribution standard limited to HEMS does not give the beneficiary a "general power of appointment" over trust assets — which means the trust assets are not included in the beneficiary's taxable estate. This is critical for dynasty trust planning: if your child has a general power of appointment, the trust assets are pulled back into their estate at death, defeating the multi-generational tax benefit.
If any of your children have special needs — or might develop them — your distribution schedule must account for the possibility that a standard distribution could disqualify the child from Medicaid, SSI, or other means-tested government benefits. The solution is a separate special needs trust provision (covered in detail in the Special Needs Children section below) that can be activated by the trustee or trust protector if a beneficiary develops qualifying disabilities.
The trustee is the person or entity who manages your children's Bitcoin after your death (or during the trust term, depending on the structure). This is arguably the most important personnel decision in your estate plan. The trustee will make distribution decisions, manage Bitcoin custody, file trust tax returns, and serve as the gatekeeper between your children and potentially life-changing wealth. Choose poorly and the trust becomes a source of family conflict or — worse — a vehicle for theft or incompetence.
The simplest approach for a revocable trust during your lifetime. You are the grantor, the trustee, and the primary beneficiary. You maintain full control. But this only works while you are alive and competent. At your death or incapacity, a successor trustee must take over — and the successor trustee selection is the real decision.
Common, but carries marital risk. If you and your spouse divorce, your ex-spouse controls your children's Bitcoin trust. Even in intact marriages, a surviving spouse may remarry, and the new spouse's interests may diverge from your children's. If you name your spouse as trustee, include strong provisions for successor trusteeship and consider requiring co-trustees or trust protector oversight.
Naming an adult sibling, parent, or close family member as trustee keeps the role within the family — but introduces relationship risk. A sibling trustee may face pressure from the beneficiary, may have their own financial difficulties, or may be unable to make objective distribution decisions for a niece or nephew they are emotionally close to. Family trustee relationships are the most common source of trust litigation.
A corporate trustee — a trust company licensed in Wyoming or South Dakota — provides institutional-grade administration: compliance, tax reporting, custody management, and objective decision-making. Annual fees typically range from $2,500 to $8,000, depending on trust size and complexity. The professional trustee has no emotional relationship with the beneficiary, which eliminates family conflict but can feel impersonal.
For Bitcoin trusts specifically, the professional trustee must understand digital asset custody, hardware wallets, multisig arrangements, and the unique characteristics of Bitcoin as a trust asset. Not all trust companies have this expertise — vet them carefully.
The directed trust model — available under Wyoming and South Dakota law — separates the trust into distinct roles:
The directed trust model gives you the best of both worlds: professional administration without surrendering investment control or distribution judgment to a bank trust department that may not understand Bitcoin.
When a trust "owns" Bitcoin, what does that actually mean? The trust is a legal entity that holds title to assets. The Bitcoin is the trust's property, managed by the trustee according to the trust terms. But unlike stocks or bonds held at a brokerage in the trust's name, Bitcoin custody requires specific technical and operational infrastructure.
The most common approach for self-custodied Bitcoin in a trust: a hardware wallet (Coldcard, Trezor, Ledger) is designated as trust property. The trust document specifies that the Bitcoin held at the associated addresses belongs to the trust. The seed phrase — the 12 or 24 words that can regenerate the private keys — is the crown jewel. It must be stored securely in multiple locations, accessible only to authorized fiduciaries.
A minimum of three copies of the seed phrase, stored in geographically separate secure locations:
Each copy should be on durable media — stamped metal plates (Cryptosteel, Billfodl) rather than paper, which is vulnerable to fire and water damage. The trust document should specify who has access to each copy and under what circumstances.
For trust Bitcoin holdings above $100,000, a multisignature (multisig) arrangement provides significantly stronger security than a single hardware wallet. A 2-of-3 multisig requires any two of three authorized key holders to sign a transaction:
This eliminates single points of failure: no individual can move the Bitcoin unilaterally, and the loss of any single key does not result in permanent loss of funds. The trust document should specify the multisig configuration, the key holders, the circumstances under which keys can be used, and the process for replacing a key holder who becomes unavailable.
Separate from the trust document itself, prepare a detailed trustee instructions document that covers:
Update this document annually. Bitcoin custody technology evolves rapidly — the solutions that are state-of-the-art in 2026 may be obsolete by 2036. Your trust document should include a technology update provision authorizing the trustee to migrate Bitcoin to new custody solutions as technology evolves.
The tax treatment of a Bitcoin trust for children varies dramatically based on the trust type. Understanding these differences is essential for choosing the right structure and managing ongoing tax obligations.
During the grantor's lifetime, a §2503(c) trust is typically treated as a grantor trust for income tax purposes. This means all trust income and capital gains are taxed on the parent's individual return — not the trust's return. For Bitcoin, this is actually advantageous: the parent pays the tax (reducing their estate further, which is a secondary estate-planning benefit), and the trust Bitcoin grows without any tax drag.
A Crummey trust can be structured as either a grantor trust or a non-grantor trust, depending on the specific powers retained by the grantor. If grantor trust: income is taxed to the parent. If non-grantor trust: income is taxed to the trust at compressed trust tax brackets.
The compressed trust tax brackets are punishing: in 2025, trust income above approximately $15,650 is taxed at the top 37% federal rate. An individual does not hit the 37% bracket until income exceeds $626,350. This means a non-grantor trust that realizes $50,000 in Bitcoin capital gains pays the top rate on nearly all of it. The solution: make distributions to beneficiaries, which shifts the income to the beneficiary's individual tax bracket. Distributions to children over 19 (or over 24 if full-time students) are taxed at the child's rate — which may be 0% or 15% for long-term capital gains if the child has low income.
A dynasty trust is typically a grantor trust during the grantor's lifetime (parent pays all income tax, which is a further estate reduction) and becomes a non-grantor trust at the grantor's death. After that, the compressed trust brackets apply — making strategic distributions to beneficiaries essential for tax efficiency.
However, if the dynasty trust is sited in Wyoming or South Dakota and the trust has no in-state source income, the trust pays zero state income tax on accumulated gains — regardless of where the beneficiaries live. This can represent significant savings: a California beneficiary receiving a distribution from a South Dakota dynasty trust pays California income tax on the distribution, but the gains that accumulated inside the trust while undistributed were never subject to California's 13.3% rate.
The generation-skipping transfer (GST) tax is a separate 40% tax on transfers that skip a generation. It exists to prevent exactly what dynasty trusts do — which is why allocating GST exemption to the trust at funding is essential. Each person has a GST exemption ($13.99 million in 2025, indexed) that can be allocated to trust contributions. Once allocated, the exemption covers the contribution and all future appreciation on that contribution — permanently. Fund a trust with $500,000 of Bitcoin and allocate GST exemption. If that Bitcoin grows to $50 million, the entire $50 million is GST-exempt forever.
This is why funding dynasty trusts early — when Bitcoin prices are relatively low or during corrections — maximizes GST exemption leverage. Every dollar of appreciation that occurs after exemption allocation is permanently sheltered.
How you fund a Bitcoin trust for your children determines the tax treatment, the basis of the Bitcoin inside the trust, and the long-term efficiency of the structure. There are four primary funding strategies.
The annual exclusion allows you to gift $19,000 per recipient per year (2025, indexed) without using any of your lifetime estate/gift tax exemption and without filing a gift tax return (unless gift-splitting with a spouse). Married couples can gift-split: $38,000 per beneficiary per year.
For a family with three children: $38,000 × 3 = $114,000 per year in gift-tax-free Bitcoin transfers to trusts. Over 10 years: $1,140,000 transferred without using any lifetime exemption. If Bitcoin appreciates 5× during that period, the trusts hold $5.7 million — entirely outside your estate.
Annual gifting requires discipline: set a calendar reminder to make the contribution, send Crummey notices (for Crummey or dynasty trusts), and document the lapse of the withdrawal window. Miss a year and you lose that year's exclusion permanently — it does not carry forward.
The lifetime estate and gift tax exemption is approximately $14 million per person in 2025. This exemption is scheduled to revert to approximately $7 million (adjusted for inflation) after 2025 under current TCJA sunset provisions — though legislative changes may modify this timeline. A lump-sum gift of Bitcoin to an irrevocable trust uses exemption but removes the Bitcoin and all future appreciation from your estate permanently.
The strategic question: is it better to gift Bitcoin now (using exemption, with carryover basis) or hold it until death (keeping it in your estate, with stepped-up basis)? The answer depends on your exemption situation, the expected appreciation, and the basis of your Bitcoin. See the stepped-up basis section below for the full analysis.
A testamentary trust is funded at your death, typically via a pour-over will that directs your estate into the trust. The Bitcoin receives a stepped-up basis (if the trust is included in your taxable estate), which eliminates the capital gains tax problem. But the Bitcoin was in your estate until death, so it is subject to estate tax if your estate exceeds the exemption.
The combination approach is often optimal: annual exclusion gifts to an irrevocable dynasty trust during your life (removing the annual contributions and their appreciation from your estate), combined with a revocable trust holding the remainder of your Bitcoin that pours over into the dynasty trust at your death with stepped-up basis.
For parents who operate or invest in Bitcoin mining, mining income offers a uniquely tax-efficient way to fund a children's trust. Newly mined Bitcoin is ordinary income at the time of receipt — but the mining operation generates substantial tax deductions through equipment depreciation (bonus depreciation allows first-year deduction of the full equipment cost), electricity and hosting expenses, and operational costs. These deductions can offset the income used to fund trust contributions.
The mechanics: mine Bitcoin, recognize ordinary income, offset with depreciation and operating deductions, contribute the mined Bitcoin to your children's trust as an annual exclusion gift. The result is tax-efficient Bitcoin acquisition that flows directly into the trust — building your children's endowment while reducing your current-year tax liability.
Mining income + depreciation deductions = the most tax-efficient way to acquire Bitcoin for your children's trust. Reduce current-year taxes while building a multi-generational Bitcoin endowment.
Explore the Mining Tax Strategy →This is the single most overlooked issue in Bitcoin trust planning for children, and getting it wrong can cost your family hundreds of thousands of dollars in unnecessary capital gains tax.
When you gift Bitcoin to an irrevocable trust during your lifetime, the trust receives your original cost basis. If you bought Bitcoin at $5,000, the trust's basis is $5,000 — regardless of Bitcoin's current market price. When your child eventually sells that Bitcoin for $500,000, they owe capital gains tax on $495,000 of gain. You have transferred not just the Bitcoin, but your tax liability.
When your child inherits Bitcoin at your death — through a revocable trust, through your estate, or through any trust included in your taxable estate — the basis is "stepped up" to the fair market value at your date of death. If Bitcoin is worth $500,000 when you die, your child's basis is $500,000. If they sell immediately, they owe zero capital gains tax.
This creates a direct conflict between two goals:
An IDGT is an irrevocable trust that is treated as a grantor trust for income tax purposes but is excluded from the grantor's estate for estate tax purposes. Some practitioners argue that assets in an IDGT receive a stepped-up basis at the grantor's death because the grantor was treated as the "owner" for income tax purposes. The IRS has not definitively ruled on this, and it remains a contested area. Do not rely on this treatment without specific guidance from your estate planning attorney and CPA.
Giving your children Bitcoin without teaching them what they have is like handing them the keys to a Formula 1 car without driving lessons. The trust document is a legal instrument — but it can also be an educational framework that ensures your children understand and appreciate the asset they are inheriting.
Wyoming and South Dakota trust law support reasonable incentive provisions — clauses that condition certain distributions on the beneficiary meeting specified requirements. For a Bitcoin trust, consider:
The trust document or trustee instructions can direct the trustee to provide specific educational resources to beneficiaries at appropriate ages:
Some families include a provision that the trustee may — but is not required to — delay a scheduled distribution if the beneficiary has not demonstrated adequate financial and Bitcoin literacy. This is the "may" language that matters: a mandatory delay based on subjective assessment invites litigation. A discretionary delay based on the trustee's reasonable judgment is more enforceable and less likely to be challenged.
The goal is not to gatekeep your children from their inheritance. It is to ensure that by the time they receive significant Bitcoin, they understand what they have, how to hold it safely, and why selling it impulsively may be the worst financial decision of their lives.
The following table compares every major option for passing Bitcoin to children. For a detailed analysis of UTMA custodial accounts specifically, see our Bitcoin UTMA guide.
| Feature | Direct Gift | UTMA | §2503(c) Trust | Crummey Trust | Dynasty Trust |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age restriction | None | 18 or 21 | 21 | You choose | You choose |
| Kiddie tax applies? | Yes (under 19/24) | Yes (under 19/24) | Grantor pays | Depends | Grantor pays (during life) |
| Trustee cost | $0 | $0 | $0–$2K/yr | $0–$5K/yr | $2.5K–$8K/yr |
| Creditor protection | None | None | Limited | Moderate | Strong (DAPT) |
| Estate inclusion | Removed | Removed | Removed | Removed | Removed |
| Spendthrift clause | N/A | No | Limited | Yes | Yes |
| College aid (FAFSA) impact | Child's asset | Child's asset | Trust asset | Trust asset | Trust asset |
| Multi-generational | No | No | No | Limited | Perpetual |
| Complexity | Minimal | Simple | Moderate | Complex | Complex |
| Setup cost | $0 | $0 | $2K–$5K | $3K–$8K | $5K–$15K |
| Annual exclusion qualifies? | Yes | Yes | Yes (auto) | Yes (Crummey) | Yes (Crummey) |
| Best for | <$5K | <$25K | $10K–$75K | $25K–$500K | $250K+ |
If your child has a disability — physical, cognitive, or developmental — that qualifies them for means-tested government benefits like Medicaid or Supplemental Security Income (SSI), a standard trust distribution can be catastrophic. Even a modest distribution from a regular trust can push the child over asset limits ($2,000 for SSI individual resource limit) and disqualify them from benefits that may be essential for their care.
A special needs trust — also called a supplemental needs trust — is designed specifically to hold assets for a disabled beneficiary without affecting their eligibility for government benefits. The trust's distributions must be for supplemental purposes only: things not covered by Medicaid or SSI, such as:
Critically, the trustee must not make distributions for food or shelter — these are considered "in-kind support and maintenance" by SSA and reduce the beneficiary's SSI benefit dollar-for-dollar (up to the "presumed maximum value" cap). The trustee must understand these rules intimately.
A third-party SNT is funded with your assets (not the child's own assets). This is the correct structure for parents funding a Bitcoin trust for a special needs child. There is no Medicaid payback requirement — when the beneficiary dies, remaining trust assets pass to other family members, not to the state.
A first-party SNT is funded with the disabled person's own assets (such as a personal injury settlement). It carries a Medicaid payback provision — when the beneficiary dies, remaining assets must reimburse the state for Medicaid benefits received. This is not the structure you want for gifted or inherited Bitcoin.
Bitcoin is an excellent asset for a special needs trust. The trust can hold Bitcoin long-term, allowing it to appreciate substantially, while making modest supplemental distributions. Because the trust's purpose is to supplement — not replace — government benefits, the trustee does not need to sell large amounts of Bitcoin regularly. The appreciating asset compounds inside the trust while the child's basic needs are covered by Medicaid and SSI.
If the special needs trust is included in the parent's estate at death (via a revocable trust pour-over), the Bitcoin receives a stepped-up basis — eliminating embedded capital gains and maximizing the trust's after-tax value for the child's supplemental needs.
Every Bitcoin trust for children should address the following elements. Use this as a review checklist when working with your estate planning attorney.
We help families design Bitcoin-specific trust structures — from trustee selection and custody architecture to distribution design and state situs optimization. Join the waitlist for a consultation.
Bitcoin mining generates the asset (BTC for trust contributions) and the deductions (depreciation, OpEx) that offset the income used to fund those gifts. For parents building a multi-generational Bitcoin endowment, mining is the most tax-efficient acquisition strategy available.
Bitcoin Mining Tax Strategy →A minor can technically possess Bitcoin — anyone can hold a private key — but minors lack the legal capacity to enter into binding contracts in most states. They cannot open exchange accounts, sign custodial agreements, or legally manage significant digital assets. If a parent dies and leaves Bitcoin directly to a minor, a court-appointed conservator must manage it until the child reaches 18 — an expensive, public, and inflexible process. A trust avoids all of these problems.
It depends on the amount and your goals. Under $25,000: a UTMA custodial account is adequate. $25,000–$250,000 with flexible distribution timing: a Crummey trust. Above $250,000 or for multi-generational transfer: a dynasty trust sited in Wyoming or South Dakota. Below the estate tax exemption with no need to remove assets from your estate: a revocable living trust for probate avoidance and stepped-up basis.
A §2503(c) minor's trust: $2,000–$5,000 to draft. A Crummey trust: $3,000–$8,000. A dynasty trust in Wyoming or South Dakota: $5,000–$15,000 for setup plus $2,500–$8,000/year in corporate trustee fees. These costs are trivial relative to the estate tax saved: a properly structured dynasty trust can shelter millions in Bitcoin appreciation from the 40% federal estate tax permanently.
Only if the trust assets are included in the grantor's taxable estate. A revocable living trust: yes — stepped-up basis at death. An irrevocable trust funded during the grantor's lifetime: generally no — carryover basis (the child inherits your original cost basis). The exception is an irrevocable grantor trust (IDGT), where the step-up treatment is contested but sometimes argued. Plan your funding strategy around this distinction — it can save hundreds of thousands in capital gains tax.
Yes. Trust documents can include incentive provisions and educational requirements. You can direct the trustee to provide Bitcoin education, require completion of financial literacy programs, or condition certain distributions on demonstrated competency. Wyoming and South Dakota both enforce reasonable incentive provisions. Draft them with enough flexibility that a future trustee can interpret them reasonably as circumstances change.
You must use a special needs trust (supplemental needs trust) to preserve eligibility for Medicaid, SSI, and other means-tested benefits. A third-party special needs trust funded with your Bitcoin does not count as the child's resource for benefits eligibility. The trustee must distribute only for supplemental purposes — never for food or shelter. Bitcoin's long-term appreciation makes it an excellent asset for a special needs trust, and a stepped-up basis at your death maximizes the trust's after-tax value.
For small amounts (under $25,000 at expected maturity) where you are comfortable with your child receiving unrestricted control at 18 or 21: a UTMA. For anything larger, or if you want creditor protection, distribution conditions, or multi-generational transfer: use a trust. The inflection point is $25,000–$50,000 in expected value at maturity. Above that, the cost of a trust is justified by the control and protection it provides. See our complete Bitcoin UTMA guide for the full analysis.
This guide is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, tax, or financial advice. Trust structures must be drafted by a licensed estate planning attorney familiar with your state's law and the trust situs state's law. Annual exclusion amounts, GST exemption figures, and tax brackets are indexed annually — verify current amounts with a CPA. Crummey notice requirements must be strictly followed to maintain gift tax qualification. Special needs trust provisions require an attorney specializing in both estate planning and disability law. This guide was current as of March 2026.