Executive Summary

A Spendthrift Trust is a trust that includes a spendthrift clause — a provision that restricts both the beneficiary's ability to transfer (assign) their interest in the trust AND creditors' ability to reach trust assets before distribution. The spendthrift clause is one of the most fundamental and widely used protective provisions in American trust law, appearing in virtually every modern irrevocable trust, from dynasty trusts to SLATs to SNTs.

Key Concept: A spendthrift provision does not create a separate "type" of trust — it is a clause or provision that can be (and almost always is) incorporated into other trust types. When people refer to a "spendthrift trust," they mean any trust that contains a spendthrift provision.

What Is a Spendthrift Trust?

A spendthrift trust protects trust assets in two ways:

  1. Anti-alienation: The beneficiary cannot voluntarily transfer, assign, pledge, or encumber their interest in the trust
  2. Anti-attachment: Creditors of the beneficiary cannot compel the trustee to make distributions or attach the beneficiary's interest to satisfy claims

Together, these restrictions mean that trust assets are protected from the beneficiary's financial mismanagement — including reckless spending, gambling debts, business failures, lawsuits, and divorce — as long as the assets remain inside the trust.

The Problem Spendthrift Trusts Solve

A grantor may want to provide for a beneficiary who:

  • Has a history of financial irresponsibility
  • Is vulnerable to predatory creditors
  • Is in a profession with high liability exposure (physicians, business owners)
  • May face divorce proceedings
  • Simply needs protection from their own poor financial decisions

Without a spendthrift clause, a beneficiary could assign their trust interest to a creditor, or a creditor could obtain a court order forcing distributions from the trust to satisfy debts.

Early American Development

The American spendthrift trust doctrine diverged from English law in the 19th century. English law generally did not recognize restraints on the alienation of equitable interests. American courts, beginning with landmark cases in the 1870s-1880s, established the opposite rule:

  • Nichols v. Eaton, 91 U.S. 716 (1875): The U.S. Supreme Court recognized the validity of spendthrift restraints, holding that a testator could restrict a beneficiary's ability to alienate their trust interest and protect it from creditors
  • Broadway National Bank v. Adams, 133 Mass. 170 (1882): The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, in an opinion by Justice Holmes, firmly established the spendthrift trust doctrine, holding that a restraint on alienation was valid even against creditors who extended credit in reliance on the beneficiary's trust interest

Modern Statutory Framework

Today, the spendthrift trust doctrine is codified in most states through:

  • Uniform Trust Code (UTC) §502: "A spendthrift provision is valid only if it restrains both voluntary and involuntary transfer of a beneficiary's interest."
  • UTC §503: Addresses exception creditors who may reach a beneficiary's interest despite a spendthrift provision
  • Restatement (Third) of Trusts §58: Endorses the spendthrift doctrine as a valid restraint on alienation

The Spendthrift Clause

What the Clause Prohibits

A standard spendthrift clause restricts:

Voluntary Transfers by the Beneficiary:

  • Assignment of trust interest to creditors
  • Pledging trust interest as collateral for a loan
  • Sale of trust interest to third parties
  • Gifting trust interest to others
  • Using trust interest as security in a business venture

Involuntary Transfers by Creditors:

  • Garnishment of trust distributions before they are made
  • Attachment of the beneficiary's trust interest
  • Execution against trust assets
  • Judicial orders compelling the trustee to make distributions to satisfy creditor claims

The "Before Distribution" Limitation

Spendthrift protection applies only while assets remain inside the trust. Once the trustee distributes assets to the beneficiary, those distributed assets become the beneficiary's personal property and are fully subject to creditor claims. This is a critical distinction:

  • Protected: Assets held in trust, undistributed income, future distribution rights
  • Not protected: Assets that have been distributed to the beneficiary, cash in the beneficiary's personal accounts, property titled in the beneficiary's name

Grantor/Settlor

Creates the trust and includes the spendthrift provision. The grantor is typically a parent, grandparent, or other family member who wants to protect the beneficiary from financial risk. The grantor cannot be the beneficiary (with narrow DAPT exceptions).

Trustee

The trustee plays a crucial role in spendthrift trust administration because:

  • Discretionary distributions: The trustee decides when, how much, and to whom to distribute — this discretion is the first line of defense against creditors
  • Duty to withhold: If the trustee knows a distribution would be immediately seized by creditors, they may have a duty to withhold the distribution to protect the beneficiary's interests
  • In-kind distributions: The trustee may distribute goods and services directly (paying vendors, buying property titled in trust) rather than distributing cash

Beneficiary

The person whose interest is protected by the spendthrift clause. The beneficiary:

  • Cannot assign, sell, or pledge their interest
  • Cannot use their trust interest as collateral
  • Has no ability to accelerate or compel distributions (if the trust is discretionary)

Creditor Protection

What Creditors CANNOT Reach

With a valid spendthrift clause in place, creditors generally cannot:

  • Force the trustee to make distributions
  • Attach or garnish the beneficiary's interest in the trust
  • Reach trust principal or undistributed income
  • Obtain a judicial order directing the trustee to pay the creditor

What Creditors CAN Reach

Creditors can reach:

  • Distributed assets: Once money or property leaves the trust and is in the beneficiary's hands, normal creditor remedies apply
  • Mandatory distributions: If the trust requires the trustee to make specific distributions (e.g., "all income shall be distributed quarterly"), a creditor may attach those distributions after they become mandatory but before physical delivery
  • Assets after distribution: Bank accounts, property, and other assets the beneficiary receives from the trust

Exception Creditors

UTC §503 Exception Creditors

Despite spendthrift protection, certain creditors are given priority access to trust assets by statute or public policy. Under the Uniform Trust Code §503 and state variations:

Exception CreditorUTC §503Rationale
Child SupportYes (§503(b)(1))Public policy favoring support of minor children
Spousal Support/AlimonyYes (§503(b)(1))Public policy favoring support of former spouses
State/Federal Tax ClaimsYes (§503(b)(2))Sovereign authority; Supremacy Clause
Necessary Expenses (Services)Yes (§503(b)(3))Providers of services that preserved the beneficiary's interest
Tort ClaimsSome statesVaries significantly; some states allow, most do not

State Variations on Exception Creditors

States that have adopted the UTC may modify the exception creditor provisions:

  • Broad exception states: Allow tort creditors, government agencies, and others to reach spendthrift trust interests
  • Narrow exception states: Limit exceptions to child support, alimony, and government claims only
  • Ultra-protective states: Very few exception creditors (Nevada, South Dakota, Alaska — these states also have DAPT statutes)

Self-Settled Spendthrift Trusts

The General Rule: No Self-Settled Protection

Under traditional trust law and the majority rule in American jurisdictions:

A person cannot create a spendthrift trust for their own benefit.

If the settlor is also a beneficiary, the spendthrift clause is void as to the settlor's creditors — creditors can reach the maximum amount that the trustee could distribute to the settlor. This rule is codified in:

  • UTC §505(a)(2): "With respect to an irrevocable trust, a creditor or assignee of the settlor may reach the maximum amount that can be distributed to or for the settlor's benefit."
  • Restatement (Third) of Trusts §58(2): Same rule

The DAPT Exception

The sole exception is the Domestic Asset Protection Trust (DAPT), available in approximately 20 states. DAPT statutes create a statutory exception to the self-settled spendthrift prohibition. See the DAPT Trust Guide for comprehensive coverage.

Discretionary vs. Mandatory Distributions

Discretionary Trusts — Maximum Protection

A fully discretionary trust gives the trustee complete authority over whether to make distributions:

  • Creditors generally cannot compel distributions
  • The beneficiary has no enforceable right to any specific distribution
  • The trustee can consider the beneficiary's financial situation (including creditor claims) when deciding whether to distribute

Mandatory Distribution Trusts — Reduced Protection

If the trust requires the trustee to make distributions (e.g., "all income shall be distributed quarterly" or "the trustee shall distribute $5,000 monthly"):

  • Creditors may be able to attach mandatory distributions through a court order
  • The beneficiary has an enforceable right to the distribution, which is reachable by creditors

The HEMS Standard

The HEMS (Health, Education, Maintenance, and Support) distribution standard is widely used as a middle ground:

  • The trustee may (not "shall") distribute for health, education, maintenance, and support
  • The ascertainable standard limits the trustee's discretion but maintains the discretionary character
  • Under IRC §2041(b)(1)(A), the ascertainable standard prevents the beneficiary from having a general power of appointment (avoiding estate inclusion)
  • Creditor protection is stronger than mandatory distributions but weaker than fully discretionary trusts

Tax Implications

Income Tax

The spendthrift clause itself has no independent tax effect. The trust's income tax treatment depends on its overall structure:

  • Grantor trusts: All income taxed to the grantor (grantor pays, trust grows tax-free)
  • Non-grantor trusts: Income either taxed to the trust (at compressed rates) or distributed to beneficiaries (carrying out DNI to their returns)

Estate Tax

The spendthrift clause's impact on estate tax depends on the beneficiary's other powers:

  • If the beneficiary holds only a spendthrift-restricted interest with no power of appointment → excluded from the beneficiary's estate
  • If the beneficiary holds a general power of appointment (despite the spendthrift clause) → included in the beneficiary's estate under IRC §2041
  • The spendthrift clause alone does not cause estate inclusion

State-Specific Variations

UTC Adoption Status

As of 2025, approximately 35 states and the District of Columbia have adopted some version of the Uniform Trust Code. Spendthrift trust recognition varies:

CategoryStatesProtection Level
Strong ProtectionSD, NV, AK, WY, DE, NHFew exception creditors; DAPT available; perpetual duration
Moderate Protection (UTC)Most UTC states (VA, NC, PA, OH, etc.)Standard exception creditors; reasonable protection
Weaker ProtectionCA, NY (pre-UTC)Broader exception creditors; some allow tort claims to reach trust

States That Have NOT Adopted the UTC

Some significant states have their own spendthrift trust statutes outside the UTC framework:

  • California: Cal. Prob. Code §15300-15307 (allows broader creditor access, including tort claims)
  • New York: EPTL §7-1.5 (recognizes spendthrift protection but with New York-specific exception creditors)
  • Texas: Tex. Prop. Code §112.035 (strong spendthrift protection with limited exception creditors)
  • Florida: Fla. Stat. §736.0502 (UTC-based with Florida modifications)

Integration with Other Trust Types

Spendthrift provisions are not standalone — they are building blocks incorporated into virtually every modern irrevocable trust:

Trust TypeSpendthrift Clause Role
Dynasty TrustEssential — protects beneficiary interests across generations from creditors and divorcing spouses
SLATStandard — protects the beneficiary spouse's interest from creditors
ILITStandard — protects beneficiary interests in death benefit proceeds
Special Needs TrustEssential — protects trust assets from being counted as beneficiary's resources
DAPTDefining feature — the self-settled spendthrift provision IS the DAPT's core mechanism
GRATIncluded — protects remainder beneficiary interests
QPRTIncluded — protects remainder beneficiary interests
Bypass/Credit ShelterStandard — protects surviving spouse and descendants' interests

Sample Provision Language

⚠️ DISCLAIMER: The following language is provided for educational and illustrative purposes only.

Standard Spendthrift Clause

ARTICLE VIII — SPENDTHRIFT PROVISION Section 8.1. No beneficiary of this Trust shall have the power to anticipate, assign, pledge, hypothecate, or in any manner encumber or dispose of all or any part of such beneficiary's interest in income or principal of this Trust, whether by voluntary or involuntary alienation. No interest of any beneficiary shall be subject to the claims of any creditor of such beneficiary, any spouse or former spouse of such beneficiary, or others, or to legal process, prior to its actual receipt by the beneficiary. Section 8.2. The Trustee shall not be required to pay or deliver any property of this Trust to or for any beneficiary's assignee or creditor.

⚠️ This is illustrative language only. Consult a licensed attorney before using any provision in a legal document.

Discretionary Distribution with Spendthrift

ARTICLE V — DISTRIBUTIONS Section 5.1. The Trustee, in the Trustee's sole and absolute discretion, may distribute to or for the benefit of any beneficiary such amounts of net income and/or principal as the Trustee determines advisable. In exercising such discretion, the Trustee may take into consideration any other resources available to the beneficiary, including any claims of creditors, and may withhold distributions if, in the Trustee's judgment, such distributions would not be in the beneficiary's best interests.

⚠️ This is illustrative language only. Consult a licensed attorney before using any provision in a legal document.

Key Case Law

Nichols v. Eaton, 91 U.S. 716 (1875)

The U.S. Supreme Court recognized the validity of spendthrift trusts, holding that a testator could restrict a beneficiary's ability to alienate their trust interest and protect it from creditor attachment. This case established the foundation for the American spendthrift trust doctrine.

Broadway National Bank v. Adams, 133 Mass. 170 (1882)

Justice Holmes held that a spendthrift restraint was valid even against creditors who extended credit in reliance on the beneficiary's trust interest. The court reasoned that the property belonged to the trust (not the beneficiary), and the beneficiary's interest was limited by the trust terms.

Shelley v. Shelley, 354 P.2d 282 (Or. 1960)

Oregon Supreme Court allowed a wife to reach a spendthrift trust to satisfy alimony and child support claims, establishing the major exception creditor doctrine for family obligations.

Sligh v. First National Bank, 704 So. 2d 1020 (Miss. 1997)

Addressed the limits of spendthrift protection, holding that once assets are distributed from the trust, they lose spendthrift protection.

Common Pitfalls & Compliance

1. Mandatory Distribution Language

Using "shall distribute" instead of "may distribute" weakens creditor protection. Solution: Use fully discretionary or HEMS standards.

2. Beneficiary as Sole Trustee with Broad Discretion

If the beneficiary controls distributions, creditors may argue the spendthrift clause is illusory. Solution: Use an independent trustee or limit the beneficiary-trustee's power to an ascertainable standard.

3. Self-Settled Spendthrift Trusts (Non-DAPT States)

Creating a spendthrift trust for your own benefit in a state without DAPT legislation. Solution: Use a DAPT state or transfer assets to a trust for the benefit of others.

4. Ignoring Exception Creditors

Assuming spendthrift protection is absolute. Solution: Understand your state's exception creditor rules; plan for child support, alimony, and tax claim exposure.

5. Distributing Large Sums in Lump

Large distributions expose assets to creditor claims. Solution: Distribute in smaller increments, make in-kind distributions, or pay vendors directly.

Key Takeaways
  • A spendthrift clause is a provision, not a trust type — it's incorporated into virtually every modern irrevocable trust.
  • Protection applies only while assets remain in trust — once distributed, assets are fully exposed to creditor claims.
  • Exception creditors can reach spendthrift interests — child support, alimony, and tax claims are the most common exceptions.
  • Self-settled spendthrift trusts are generally void — the settlor's creditors can reach trust assets. DAPTs are the narrow exception.
  • Discretionary distributions provide stronger protection than mandatory distributions — give the trustee maximum flexibility.
  • The HEMS standard (Health, Education, Maintenance, Support) provides a useful balance between beneficiary access and creditor protection.
  • Every irrevocable trust should include a spendthrift clause — it's one of the most valuable yet simplest protective provisions available.
  • State law matters — protection levels vary significantly; choose favorable jurisdictions for trust situs.

DISCLAIMER: The content provided herein is for educational and informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, tax, financial, or investment advice. Trust Wizard is not a law firm and does not provide attorney services. The information presented may not reflect the most current legal developments. Readers should consult with qualified legal and tax professionals before making any decisions regarding trust formation, estate planning, or tax strategies. All sample provision language is illustrative only and should not be used in any legal document without review by a licensed attorney in the applicable jurisdiction.