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Testamentary vs Inter Vivos Trust: Key Differences in Canada

Updated

Overview: Two Types of Trusts

Feature Inter Vivos Trust Testamentary Trust
Also called Living trust Estate trust
Created During settlor’s lifetime Through a will, on death
Effective Immediately Upon death
Funded Lifetime transfers Estate assets
Tax rate (undistributed) Top marginal (~50%) Usually top marginal*
21-year rule Yes Yes (from creation)

*Exceptions: Graduated Rate Estates (first 36 months) and Qualified Disability Trusts.

Inter Vivos (Living) Trusts

Characteristics

Feature Details
Creation Trust deed signed during lifetime
Settlor Usually contributes initial asset
Funding Transfer assets or subscribe for shares
Revocable or not? Typically irrevocable (tax reasons)
Takes effect Immediately upon creation

Common Uses

Purpose How It Works
Family business succession Hold company shares
Income splitting Distribute income to beneficiaries
Asset protection Remove assets from personal estate
Cottage succession Transfer family property
Probate avoidance Assets not in probate estate

Tax Treatment

Income Type Tax Rate
Retained income Top marginal rate
Distributed income Beneficiary’s rate
Capital gains (retained) Top rate on 66.67% inclusion
Capital gains (distributed) Beneficiary’s rate

Key Dates

Event Timing
Trust year-end December 31
Tax return due 90 days after year-end
21-year deemed disposition 21 years from creation

Testamentary Trusts

Characteristics

Feature Details
Creation Through a will
Settlor The deceased person
Funding Assets from the estate
Revocable? Can modify will before death
Takes effect Upon death

Common Uses

Purpose How It Works
Trust for minor children Manage inheritance until adulthood
Spousal trust Income to spouse, capital to children
Qualified Disability Trust Protect disabled beneficiary
Henson trust Maintain disability benefits eligibility
Blended family planning Provide for spouse and children separately

Graduated Rate Estates

The first 36 months after death, an estate can be designated as a Graduated Rate Estate (GRE):

Feature GRE Benefit
Tax rates Graduated (lowest brackets first)
Donations Can be claimed in year of death or estate
Year-end Can choose any date
Loss carryback Capital losses to year of death
Duration Maximum 36 months

Qualified Disability Trusts (QDTs)

Feature QDT Benefit
Tax rates Graduated rates (permanent)
Beneficiary Must qualify for DTC
Election Made annually with T3 return
Benefit Lower tax on retained income

Non-Qualifying Testamentary Trusts

Feature Tax Treatment
After GRE period Top marginal rate on retained income
No joint election Same as inter vivos
Still useful For control, protection, minor beneficiaries

Side-by-Side Comparison

Factor Inter Vivos Testamentary
Created During lifetime At death via will
Probate Can avoid Goes through probate
Tax rates Top marginal Top marginal (except GRE/QDT)
Control during life Settlor may be trustee N/A
Asset protection Yes, if properly structured Limited
Income splitting Yes (subject to TOSI) Yes (subject to TOSI)
21-year rule From trust creation From date of death
Cost to create $3,000–$10,000 Legal fees for will
Ongoing costs Annual returns, administration Annual returns, administration

When to Use Inter Vivos Trusts

Best For

Situation Benefit
Business owners Income splitting, LCGE multiplication
Cottage owners Multi-generational transfer
Asset protection needs Separate assets from estate
Probate planning Assets avoid probate
Immediate effect needed Trust operates now

Example: Family Business

A business owner creates an inter vivos family trust to hold shares of their company:

  • Trust distributes dividends to adult family members
  • Each beneficiary can use their LCGE on sale
  • Succession planning built in
  • Asset protection if structured correctly

When to Use Testamentary Trusts

Best For

Situation Benefit
Minor children Manage inheritance until adulthood
Disabled beneficiary QDT with graduated rates
Spendthrift beneficiary Control distributions
Second marriage Provide for spouse and children
First 36 months GRE graduated rates

Example: Trust for Minor

A parent’s will creates a testamentary trust for their 10-year-old child:

  • Trustee manages assets until child is 25
  • Funds available for education, health, maintenance
  • Capital distributed in stages (e.g., 1/3 at 25, 30, 35)
  • Protects inheritance from poor decisions

Spousal Trust Comparison

Inter Vivos Spousal Trust (Alter Ego/Joint Partner)

Feature Details
Creator age 65+
Beneficiaries Settlor and/or spouse only
Rollover Assets transfer at cost
21-year rule Applies
Probate Avoided

Testamentary Spousal Trust

Feature Details
Created At death via will
Income beneficiary Surviving spouse
Capital beneficiary Children or others
Rollover Assets transfer at cost
21-year rule Starts at death
Probate Estate goes through probate

Tax Planning Considerations

Attribution Rules

Trust Type Attribution Risk
Inter vivos Yes — if funds from settlor to spouse/minor
Testamentary Generally no — settlor is deceased

TOSI Rules

Trust Type TOSI Applies?
Inter vivos Yes — splits to related minors/some adults
Testamentary Yes — same rules apply

21-Year Planning

Trust Type 21-Year Date
Inter vivos 21 years from creation
Testamentary 21 years from death

Both require planning to avoid forced capital gains recognition.

Cost Comparison

Inter Vivos Trust

Cost Amount
Legal setup $3,000–$10,000
Annual T3 return $500–$2,000
Ongoing advice $500–$2,000/year

Testamentary Trust

Cost Amount
Will drafting $1,000–$5,000
Probate fees 0.5–1.5% of estate (varies by province)
Annual T3 return $500–$2,000
Ongoing administration $500–$2,000/year

Choosing Between Trust Types

Decision Framework

Question If Yes, Consider
Need control during lifetime? Inter vivos
Want to avoid probate? Inter vivos
Planning for minor children? Often testamentary
Disabled beneficiary? QDT (testamentary)
Business income splitting? Inter vivos
Asset protection priority? Inter vivos
Simple estate plan? Testamentary might be enough
Cost a concern? Testamentary is simpler

Often Both

Many estate plans include both types:

  • Inter vivos trust for business/cottage now
  • Testamentary trust for residual estate

Key Takeaways

  • Inter vivos trusts work during your lifetime; testamentary trusts are created at death
  • Both generally pay tax at top marginal rates on undistributed income
  • GREs (first 36 months) and QDTs are exceptions with graduated rates
  • Inter vivos trusts can avoid probate; testamentary trusts cannot
  • Both are subject to TOSI rules for income splitting
  • Both face the 21-year deemed disposition rule
  • Consult estate and tax professionals for your situation