Home › Research › Can Bitcoin Go in a Living Trust?
Yes — Bitcoin can go in a revocable living trust. The process differs from transferring stocks or real estate: you don't transfer coins on-chain or record a deed. Instead, you execute a trust assignment document declaring your Bitcoin holdings are owned by you as trustee of the trust. Exchange accounts can typically be retitled in the trust's name directly. The trust then controls succession — bypassing probate entirely — while you retain full control during your lifetime.
In This Article
- Why a Living Trust Matters for Bitcoin
- How Bitcoin Is "Transferred" to a Trust
- Step-by-Step: Funding a Trust with Bitcoin
- What the Trust Documents Must Include
- The Seed Phrase Mistake — and What to Do Instead
- RUFADAA and Trustee Authority
- The LLC Wrapper Strategy
- Choosing a Trustee Who Can Handle Bitcoin
- The Directed Trust Structure for Larger Positions
- Revocable vs. Irrevocable: What Each Does for Bitcoin
- Step-Up in Basis: What the Revocable Trust Preserves
- Six Common Mistakes When Putting Bitcoin in a Trust
- Why a Living Trust Matters for Bitcoin
- How Bitcoin Is "Transferred" to a Trust
- Step-by-Step: Funding a Trust with Bitcoin
- What the Trust Documents Must Include
- The Seed Phrase Mistake — and What to Do Instead
- RUFADAA and Trustee Authority
- The LLC Wrapper Strategy
- Choosing a Trustee Who Can Handle Bitcoin
- The Directed Trust Structure for Larger Positions
- Revocable vs. Irrevocable: What Each Does for Bitcoin
- Step-Up in Basis: What the Revocable Trust Preserves
- Six Common Mistakes When Putting Bitcoin in a Trust
Why a Living Trust Matters for Bitcoin
A revocable living trust holds assets during your lifetime and transfers them to named beneficiaries at death — without probate. Probate is the court-supervised process of validating a will and distributing assets: typically 9–18 months, with attorney fees commonly running 2–5% of gross estate value, and all proceedings on public record. For a $2 million Bitcoin estate, that is $40,000–$100,000 in fees and over a year of delay before heirs receive anything.
For Bitcoin specifically, the probate risk is compounded beyond cost and time. If Bitcoin is not clearly documented in your estate plan, heirs may not know it exists. Wallets with no identified heir are lost forever. And the court process to establish an executor's authority to access a hardware wallet can take long enough that practical access requires legal action — expensive, slow, uncertain. A properly structured trust bypasses all of this.
The trust also allows you to specify legally binding terms for how your Bitcoin should be managed, accessed, and distributed — including custody requirements, successor trustee technical competency, and distribution conditions that courts are not equipped to efficiently adjudicate.
How Bitcoin Is "Transferred" to a Trust
Here is where Bitcoin differs fundamentally from every other asset you have probably placed in trust. When you transfer a brokerage account, you update the registration at the custodian. When you transfer real estate, you execute a new deed and record it. Bitcoin has no central custodian and no public registry.
To "place" self-custodied Bitcoin in a living trust, you do not move the coins to a new wallet or generate a new on-chain address. You execute a trust assignment document — a legal declaration that your Bitcoin holdings (identified by wallet address, hardware wallet serial, or reference to your Letter of Instruction) are now owned by you in your capacity as trustee of the trust, for the trust's benefit.
For exchange-held Bitcoin, the process is closer to a brokerage account retitling: you contact the exchange and request that the account be registered in the trust's name (e.g., "The [Your Name] Living Trust, [Your Name], Trustee"). Many major exchanges support this; some require specific documentation. In either case, the goal is that the exchange recognizes the trust as the account holder, giving your successor trustee direct authority to manage the account without needing a POA or court order.
Step-by-Step: Funding a Trust with Bitcoin
-
1Create the revocable living trust document
Work with a Bitcoin-literate estate attorney to draft a trust that includes explicit digital asset authority, RUFADAA-compliant language, and successor trustee provisions that address Bitcoin custody. A standard template without digital asset provisions is insufficient.
-
2Prepare a trust assignment document for self-custodied Bitcoin
Execute a formal assignment that identifies your Bitcoin holdings by reference (wallet addresses, hardware wallet description, or reference to your Letter of Instruction) and declares them owned by you as trustee of the trust. Your estate attorney should draft this; it is a standalone legal document executed with your trust.
-
3Retitle exchange accounts in the trust's name
Contact each exchange where you hold Bitcoin and request account retitling to trust ownership. Provide your trust certification document (a short-form document confirming trust existence and trustee authority, without disclosing the full trust contents). Most major exchanges support this process — allow 1–4 weeks.
-
4Write and store a Letter of Instruction
Create a detailed operational document — separate from the trust — that tells your successor trustee where hardware wallets are located, where seed phrase backups are stored, how multisig configurations work, and what custodians or advisors to contact. This is the document that gives legal authority operational legs.
-
5Confirm SDIRA and other Bitcoin custodians
If Bitcoin is held in a Self-Directed IRA, the SDIRA passes via IRA beneficiary designation (not the trust, in most cases) — confirm this with your SDIRA custodian and your estate attorney. Do not assume the trust governs IRA-held Bitcoin.
-
6Brief your successor trustee
Tell your designated successor trustee that they are named, where the trust document is, where the Letter of Instruction is, and who to contact (your estate attorney, your Bitcoin custody advisor). An unprepared successor trustee — even with a perfect trust document — may delay access to Bitcoin by weeks or months.
-
7Review annually and update when custody changes
Every time you open a new wallet, move Bitcoin to a new exchange, or change your multisig configuration, update the Letter of Instruction and verify that the trust assignment still accurately captures your holdings. An outdated Letter of Instruction defeats the purpose of the trust structure.
What the Trust Documents Must Include
Standard revocable living trust templates drafted before 2016 typically contain no provisions addressing digital assets. This is a critical gap. Even more recently drafted trusts may use boilerplate "digital asset" language that is not specific enough to satisfy RUFADAA requirements or to give a successor trustee clear operating authority for self-custodied Bitcoin.
Your trust document — or an amendment to it — should include:
- Express digital asset authority: Explicit authorization for the trustee to hold, manage, transfer, exchange, and distribute digital assets, virtual currency, and cryptocurrency — including Bitcoin specifically. "Financial assets" or "personal property" language is insufficient in many states.
- RUFADAA-compliant authorization: Language expressly granting the trustee authority to access digital assets under your state's adoption of the Revised Uniform Fiduciary Access to Digital Assets Act. The trust document is the primary mechanism for RUFADAA authority where no online tool (such as an exchange's successor designation feature) exists.
- Custody authority: Authorization for the trustee to: operate hardware wallets and software wallets; manage and update custody configurations; engage professional Bitcoin custodians; execute multisig transactions; and change custody architecture when appropriate for the security of the trust's assets.
- Letter of Instruction reference: A provision directing the trustee to rely on the Letter of Instruction for operational custody details, without embedding those details in the trust document itself (which may be disclosed in other proceedings).
- Successor trustee succession protocol: Clear provisions for successor trustee appointment that address the Bitcoin-specific question of custody transition — including who provides the successor trustee with access to the Letter of Instruction and when.
The Seed Phrase Mistake — and What to Do Instead
Critical warning: Never write seed phrases, private keys, hardware wallet PINs, or passphrase information directly into your trust document, will, or any legal document that will be filed with a court, held in an attorney's file, or accessible to multiple parties. Trust documents can be amended, are sometimes disclosed in probate proceedings, and are accessed by attorneys, paralegals, and others with legitimate but broad access. A seed phrase in a legal document is a catastrophic security exposure.
The correct approach has two parts: the trust document contains references to custody arrangements and directs the trustee to the Letter of Instruction. The Letter of Instruction contains the operational details — and is stored in a physically secure, access-controlled location (a hardware-encrypted container, a home safe, a safety deposit box, or a purpose-built inheritance service). The Letter of Instruction tells the trustee where to find credentials, not the credentials themselves in all cases.
For seed phrases specifically: store them offline, physically, in at least two separate locations (protecting against fire, flood, or physical loss at one site), with one location accessible to your successor trustee under conditions documented in the Letter of Instruction. Many families store one copy in a home safe and one with their estate attorney in a sealed envelope, to be opened only on death or incapacity.
RUFADAA and Trustee Authority
The Revised Uniform Fiduciary Access to Digital Assets Act (RUFADAA) has been adopted in some form in over 45 states. It provides the legal framework giving trustees (and other fiduciaries) authority to access and manage digital assets after incapacity or death.
Under RUFADAA, a trustee's authority to access digital assets is governed by a three-tier priority system:
- Online tool: If you have used an exchange's built-in legacy/successor tool to designate a trustee, that designation controls
- Trust document: If no online tool is used, the trust document's express grant of digital asset authority controls
- Terms of service: If neither an online tool nor a legal document addresses the issue, the exchange's terms of service control — which typically prohibit third-party access
For self-custodied Bitcoin — where there is no exchange with a legacy tool — the trust document's express grant of authority is the only RUFADAA mechanism available. This is why the trust's digital asset provisions are not optional or boilerplate — they are the primary legal basis for your successor trustee's authority to act.
Note: in states that have enacted modified versions of RUFADAA, or in the small number of states that have not yet adopted it, the analysis may differ. Your estate attorney should confirm your state's specific digital asset fiduciary statute.
The LLC Wrapper Strategy
Many sophisticated Bitcoin families use a limited liability company (LLC) as an intermediate holding vehicle between the trust and the Bitcoin. Rather than the trust directly holding Bitcoin, the trust holds 100% of the membership interests in a single-member LLC — and the LLC holds the Bitcoin.
This structure offers several advantages:
- Operational flexibility: The LLC can have a simple operating agreement that addresses Bitcoin custody, management authority, and succession in detail — more operationally specific than a trust document typically allows
- Liability isolation: In states with strong LLC charging order protection (Wyoming, Delaware, Nevada), the LLC membership interests may be harder for creditors to reach than trust assets held directly
- Multi-generational flexibility: A family Bitcoin LLC can be transferred between trust generations without complex on-chain transactions — the membership interests transfer, not the Bitcoin itself
- Co-ownership governance: For families where multiple family members contribute Bitcoin to a shared structure, an LLC provides a formal governance framework (including voting rights, transfer restrictions, and buyout provisions) that a trust cannot easily replicate
The trade-off: LLC structures add cost and complexity — annual state fees, operating agreement maintenance, and potentially a separate tax filing. For Bitcoin positions below $500,000–$1 million, the cost-benefit often favors the simpler direct trust holding. For larger positions or families with multiple members, the LLC wrapper is frequently worth the additional overhead.
Choosing a Trustee Who Can Handle Bitcoin
The quality of your trust structure is only as good as your trustee's ability to execute it. For Bitcoin, this means more than competent administration — your trustee needs to either have Bitcoin technical literacy or have clear authority and established relationships to engage experts who do.
Questions to evaluate a prospective successor trustee's Bitcoin capability:
- Do they understand what a hardware wallet is and how to access it?
- Are they comfortable coordinating with a Bitcoin custody specialist or professional custodian?
- Do they understand basic concepts of multisig custody, seed phrase storage, and on-chain transactions?
- Are they geographically accessible enough to respond quickly to a custody emergency?
- Do they have established relationships with your estate attorney and your Bitcoin advisors?
If no individual in your life meets all these criteria, consider naming a co-trustee arrangement: a family member or trusted individual for distribution decisions and family knowledge, paired with a professional trustee or Bitcoin custody specialist for technical execution. Many families name a family member as successor trustee with explicit authority to delegate Bitcoin-specific decisions to a designated advisor — achieving both personal judgment and technical competence.
The Directed Trust Structure for Larger Positions
For Bitcoin positions large enough to warrant institutional-grade management ($2M+), a directed trust structure separates the investment management function from the administrative trustee function. An Investment Direction Advisor — a Bitcoin-specialized family office, registered investment advisor, or custody specialist — has sole authority over Bitcoin investment and custody decisions. A corporate trustee (a bank trust department or trust company) handles administration: tax compliance, record-keeping, beneficiary communication, and distribution management.
This structure is authorized by statute in Wyoming, South Dakota, Nevada, Delaware, and Florida. It allows families to retain the institutional continuity and administrative expertise of a traditional corporate trustee while ensuring that Bitcoin custody decisions are made by parties who actually understand the asset. For a revocable living trust that may eventually become irrevocable (upon your death, converting to a family trust for heirs), building the directed trust architecture into the original document saves significant restructuring costs later.
Revocable vs. Irrevocable: What Each Does for Bitcoin
| Feature | Revocable Living Trust | Irrevocable Trust (e.g., Dynasty Trust) |
|---|---|---|
| Control during lifetime | Full — you can amend or revoke anytime | None — you surrender control at funding |
| Probate avoidance | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes |
| Estate tax reduction | ❌ No — still in your taxable estate | ✅ Yes — assets removed from taxable estate |
| Step-up in basis at death | ✅ Yes — full step-up | ❌ No — carryover basis inside trust |
| Creditor protection (lifetime) | ❌ No — you control it, creditors can reach it | ✅ Yes — for properly structured irrevocable trusts |
| Multi-generational transfer | Limited to trust duration in your state | Perpetual in WY/SD/NV/DE |
| Best for | Holders below federal estate tax exemption; primary planning layer | Holders above exemption; long-term multi-generational strategy |
For most Bitcoin holders, the revocable living trust is the essential first layer — not the only layer. It solves probate, provides succession clarity, and preserves the step-up in basis. If and when your Bitcoin appreciates to the point where estate tax exposure becomes significant, irrevocable structures are added on top of or alongside the revocable trust.
Step-Up in Basis: What the Revocable Trust Preserves
One of the most important reasons to use a revocable trust rather than an irrevocable structure for Bitcoin held below the estate tax exemption: the revocable trust preserves the step-up in basis at death.
When you die with Bitcoin in a revocable trust, your heirs inherit the Bitcoin with a new cost basis equal to the date-of-death fair market value. All appreciation that occurred during your lifetime is permanently exempt from capital gains tax — erased. If you bought Bitcoin at $8,000 and it is worth $200,000 at your death, your heirs inherit at $200,000 per coin, owing no capital gains tax on the $192,000 of appreciation.
An irrevocable trust eliminates estate tax exposure but sacrifices this step-up. The trust's cost basis is the original price you paid when you funded it. For families significantly below the federal exemption, this trade-off is strongly in favor of the revocable trust structure — the step-up benefit can be worth far more than the estate tax savings from an irrevocable structure you don't need.
Six Common Mistakes When Putting Bitcoin in a Trust
- Using a standard template without digital asset provisions. A trust that says "financial assets" and "personal property" may not give your successor trustee clear RUFADAA authority over Bitcoin. Have a Bitcoin-literate attorney review or draft the digital asset provisions specifically.
- Writing seed phrases or private keys into the trust document. As described above — catastrophic security exposure. Credentials belong in a separate secured Letter of Instruction, never in a legal document.
- Forgetting to retitle exchange accounts. A trust assignment document handles self-custodied Bitcoin legally, but exchange accounts held in your individual name still pass through your estate unless retitled in the trust's name. Complete both steps.
- Not briefing the successor trustee. A trust document and Letter of Instruction that no one has read are useless in an emergency. Your successor trustee should know they are designated, know where both documents are, and have the contact information for your estate attorney and Bitcoin advisor.
- Never updating the Letter of Instruction. Custody arrangements change — new wallets, new exchanges, new multisig configurations. An outdated Letter of Instruction that no longer accurately describes your custody may leave your successor trustee as confused as if no document existed.
- Assuming the trust handles IRA-held Bitcoin. Bitcoin in a Self-Directed IRA does not pass through your trust — it passes via IRA beneficiary designation. These are separate succession mechanisms that must be coordinated, not assumed to be covered by the same document.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does putting Bitcoin in a trust trigger a taxable event?
Transferring Bitcoin to a revocable living trust is not a taxable event. The IRS treats the grantor and the revocable trust as the same entity. No sale, exchange, or taxable transfer occurs. The cost basis remains unchanged. Transferring to an irrevocable trust is different -- it is a completed gift for gift tax purposes, potentially using lifetime exemption or triggering gift tax above the annual exclusion.
Can a trust own a hardware wallet?
Yes -- legally, a trust can own any asset, including the hardware wallet that holds Bitcoin private keys. The trust is the legal owner of the Bitcoin; the Letter of Instruction establishes the successor trustee's access protocol. Both the legal ownership framework and the practical access instructions are necessary for a complete Bitcoin trust structure.
What happens to trust Bitcoin if the grantor is incapacitated?
The successor trustee named in the trust document immediately assumes management authority -- no court involvement required. For exchange-held Bitcoin, the trustee presents the trust document and incapacity certification. For self-custody Bitcoin, the trustee follows the Letter of Instruction to access hardware wallets. This continuity is one of the primary advantages of a revocable trust over a will for Bitcoin holders.
Bitcoin Mining: Tax Advantages to Use Today
A living trust manages how Bitcoin transfers. Bitcoin mining manages how you accumulate Bitcoin while creating significant current-year tax offsets through equipment depreciation and operating expense deductions. Abundant Mines has compiled every major Bitcoin mining tax strategy in one resource.
Explore Bitcoin Mining Tax Strategies →Structure Your Bitcoin Trust Correctly
A revocable living trust with proper digital asset provisions is the foundation of Bitcoin estate planning. We coordinate Bitcoin-literate estate attorneys who draft trust documents built for self-custodied Bitcoin — not adapted from traditional asset templates.
Explore Our Services →Related Reading
Hal Franklin · Bitcoin Wealth Strategist
Hal focuses exclusively on Bitcoin wealth management — estate planning, custody architecture, trust structures, and tax strategy for concentrated Bitcoin positions. The Bitcoin Family Office does not advise on altcoins or traditional instruments. Work with us →
Important Disclosure
This content is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal, tax, financial, or investment advice. Laws and regulations differ by state and change over time. Always consult with qualified legal counsel and a licensed tax professional before implementing any estate planning strategy. The Bitcoin Family Office does not provide legal, tax, or investment advisory services.