Lady Bird Deed vs. Revocable Living Trust


Florida Estate Planning Guide

Lady Bird Deed vs. Revocable Living Trust

Which Florida estate planning tool is right for your home — and your heirs? Here’s a plain-English breakdown of costs, control, and Medicaid implications.

If you own a home in Florida and want to avoid probate, two tools come up constantly: the Lady Bird Deed (Enhanced Life Estate Deed) and the Revocable Living Trust. Both accomplish the core goal — passing your property to loved ones without court involvement. But they work completely differently and carry very different costs, complexity levels, and Medicaid implications.

This guide breaks down everything side by side so you can make the right call for your situation — or talk to your attorney with actual context.

Quick answer: For a Florida homeowner with a single property and straightforward heirs, the Lady Bird Deed is usually the faster, cheaper, and equally effective choice. Trusts make more sense when you have multiple states, complex beneficiary situations, or significant assets beyond real estate.

What Is a Lady Bird Deed?

A Lady Bird Deed — formally called an Enhanced Life Estate Deed — lets you transfer your Florida home to named beneficiaries at death while retaining 100% control during your lifetime. You can sell it, mortgage it, rent it, or change the beneficiary entirely without anyone’s permission or signature. When you die, ownership transfers automatically to whoever you named — no probate required.

Florida recognizes Lady Bird Deeds by statute and strong case law. They’re particularly effective for Medicaid planning because Florida Medicaid does not treat a Lady Bird Deed as a disqualifying transfer. The property stays out of the Medicaid asset calculation while you’re alive and avoids the standard 5-year lookback penalty.

What Is a Revocable Living Trust?

A Revocable Living Trust is a legal entity you create during your lifetime to hold your assets — including real estate. You transfer the deed of your home into the trust, and the trust document dictates what happens to those assets when you die. Because the trust owns the assets, they avoid probate entirely.

The trust is “revocable” — you can amend or dissolve it any time. You typically serve as your own trustee during your lifetime, so day-to-day control doesn’t change. But unlike a Lady Bird Deed, a trust requires you to actually re-title assets into it to work properly. Miss one and that asset can still go through probate.

Lady Bird Deed vs. Living Trust: Side-by-Side

Feature Lady Bird Deed Revocable Living Trust
Avoids probate on real estate ✔ Yes ✔ Yes (if funded)
Covers all assets (bank accounts, investments) ✘ Real estate only ✔ Yes (all asset types)
Typical cost to create ✔ $225–$400 ✘ $1,500–$3,500+
Complexity & paperwork ✔ Simple — one deed ✘ Multi-document package; assets must be retitled
Medicaid-friendly (no lookback penalty) ✔ Yes — not a countable transfer ⚠ Depends on trust terms; usually yes
Estate recovery protection (after death) ⚠ Subject to Medicaid lien ⚠ Also subject to Medicaid lien
Can change beneficiary without co-operation ✔ Yes — record a new deed ✔ Yes — amend the trust
Privacy (public record) ✘ Deed is public record ✔ Trust document stays private
Protects against beneficiary’s creditors ✔ Yes — until grantor’s death ⚠ No — until distributed
Works across multiple states ✘ Florida-specific tool ✔ Yes — covers any state’s real estate
Annual maintenance required ✔ None ✘ Must fund & maintain; successor trustees
Step-up in tax basis at death ✔ Yes ✔ Yes
Homestead exemption stays intact ✔ Yes ⚠ Must be structured correctly

When a Lady Bird Deed Wins

✔ Choose a Lady Bird Deed If…

  • Your main asset is your Florida home
  • You want the lowest possible cost
  • You’re on or approaching Medicaid
  • You want a simple, one-document solution
  • You want the deed executed and recorded fast
  • Your beneficiary situation is straightforward
  • You want to maintain Homestead protections

✔ Choose a Living Trust If…

  • You own real estate in multiple states
  • You have complex beneficiary instructions (minors, special needs)
  • You want privacy — deed doesn’t go on public record
  • You have significant non-real-estate assets to unify
  • You want to control distributions after your death
  • Your estate may exceed federal exemption thresholds

The Medicaid Planning Angle

This is where the Lady Bird Deed really shines for Florida seniors. When applying for Florida long-term care Medicaid (nursing home coverage), any asset transfer made within the prior 5 years can create a penalty period. But a Lady Bird Deed is not considered a completed transfer because you retain the right to revoke it. The property doesn’t count as a Medicaid gift — meaning you could execute a Lady Bird Deed today and qualify for Medicaid immediately.

A standard revocable living trust generally achieves a similar result, but the structure matters. If the trust is irrevocable, the analysis changes entirely. Always confirm the Medicaid implications with a qualified elder law attorney.

Important: Even with a Lady Bird Deed, Florida Medicaid can place a recovery lien on the property after death if Medicaid paid for long-term care. This is called Estate Recovery. The lien must be satisfied before beneficiaries receive clear title. Neither a Lady Bird Deed nor a revocable trust eliminates this risk entirely.

Cost Comparison: Real Numbers

Here’s what you’re actually looking at in Florida:

  • Lady Bird Deed (DIY form): $14.95–$49 + county recording fee (~$10–$25)
  • Lady Bird Deed (professional preparation): $225–$400 including notarization & witnesses
  • Revocable Living Trust (attorney-drafted): $1,500–$3,500 for the full package (trust, pour-over will, healthcare docs)
  • Trust ongoing maintenance: Every time you acquire a new property, it must be deeded into the trust — additional attorney/recording fees each time

For a single Florida home with straightforward heirs, the Lady Bird Deed delivers the same probate-avoidance result at a fraction of the cost.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does a Lady Bird Deed replace the need for a will in Florida?
No. A Lady Bird Deed only covers real estate. You still need a will (or trust) to address other assets like bank accounts, vehicles, personal property, and investments. Think of the Lady Bird Deed as a targeted tool for your home — not a complete estate plan.

Can I do both — a Lady Bird Deed AND a living trust?
Yes, and some people do. For example, you might use a Lady Bird Deed to handle your Florida home quickly and affordably, then create a trust for other assets or out-of-state property. They’re not mutually exclusive.

What happens if my beneficiary dies before me?
With a Lady Bird Deed, if the named beneficiary predeceases you, the property would pass through your probate estate unless you record a new deed naming a different beneficiary. With a trust, the trust document typically includes contingency provisions. This is one area where a well-drafted trust has an edge.

Does a Lady Bird Deed affect my Florida Homestead exemption?
No. Executing a Lady Bird Deed does not affect your Homestead exemption for property tax purposes or your Homestead protections under Florida law. You remain the owner in every meaningful sense during your lifetime.

Is a Lady Bird Deed recognized in all Florida counties?
Yes. Lady Bird Deeds are recognized throughout all 67 Florida counties and are fully enforceable under Florida law. Once properly executed and recorded with the county clerk, they create a valid contingent remainder interest in your beneficiary.

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