Comparing irrevocable and revocable trusts is comparing governance modes: who can rewrite the rules, what leaves the estate path, and what friction you accept. Anchor the decision in boundary critique, stock vs. flow, entropy (maintenance costs), and path dependence—because gifts and basis decisions echo for decades.
1. Control vs. Protection
Revocable trusts optimize control and probate hygiene while you are alive; you can rewrite them like software. Irrevocable trusts trade away some control to move assets outside your direct estate path—when drafted correctly, they are boundary engineering, not magic. The choice is not "which sounds richer" but which failure mode you are buying insurance against: disorder at death, creditor exposure, tax character, or family conflict.
Map the decision onto boundary critique: what is inside the legal system you govern, what sits in a separate shell, and what remains a personal liability?
"A trust without a purpose clause is a costume with filing fees."
2. Revocable — Hygiene and Flexibility
Revocable structures shine for incapacity planning, orderly transfer, and privacy relative to pure probate. They are also where most people should start: clarity beats sophistication when sophistication is misunderstood. Pair with stock vs. flow thinking—what stock of assets moves on death, and what flows must continue to fund dependents?
3. Irrevocable — Shell Discipline
Irrevocable planning is serious because gift character, basis, and trustee powers have teeth. This is the domain of counsel, not blog bravado. At the systems level, you are installing a module with its own governance: trustees, distribution standards, and audit trails.
Probate avoidance, incapacity, tax, creditor risk, special needs, dynasty—pick primary; others are constraints.
Operating cash, career optionality, marital property agreements—do not freeze what must flex.
Funding schedule, trustee succession, investment policy, and distribution logic on one page.
Birth, divorce, liquidity event, move—path dependence updates the trust map.
4. Fees, Friction, and Entropy
Complex structures carry recurring costs: counsel, compliance, corporate maintenance. Budget them like entropy lines, not one-time heroics. If maintenance cannot be funded calmly, the shell is a stress amplifier.
5. Diagram the Flow
Before signatures, sketch where cash and control move year by year. Causal loop diagrams expose hidden feedback between family roles, business cashflow, and trustee discretion—where most "unexpected" disputes begin.
Build the lattice, not the legend.
Return to the Reading hub for essays, tools, and the rest of the 100-topic map.
See also in Strata Atlas: Family Limited Partnerships (FLP) Organizing fam · Pareto Distribution Why 20% of your assets will · The Three-Bucket Strategy Cash Flow, Growth, and · Inversion Thinking about how to not be poor to f · Tax-Loss Harvesting A system for turning losses