Trust Administration Cost Estimator — All
50 States
When a trust creator passes away, the successor trustee must settle the trust — and that process isn't free. Trustee compensation, attorney fees for complex distributions, accountant fees for tax filings, and appraisal costs for real estate or business interests can add up quickly. Unlike probate, trust administration happens privately, but the costs can rival or exceed probate expenses for larger estates. This calculator estimates what trust settlement will cost based on trust value, asset complexity, and your state's trustee compensation norms.
Important: This tool provides educational estimates only — not legal advice. Made For Law is not a law firm and is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or connected to any federal, state, county, or local government agency or court system. Calculator results are based on statutory formulas and publicly available fee schedules — not AI. Supporting content is AI-assisted and editorially reviewed. Results may not reflect recent legislative changes or your specific circumstances. Do not rely solely on these estimates — always verify with official sources and consult a licensed attorney before making legal or financial decisions. Full disclaimer

Estimate Trust Administration Costs
Enter your state and trust value to estimate trustee fees, attorney fees, accounting costs, and other trust settlement expenses.
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Frequently asked questions
Edited and reviewed by our editorial team. Answers are general information — not legal advice.
What costs are involved in trust administration?
Trust administration costs typically include: trustee compensation (professional trustees charge 0.5–1.5% of trust assets annually; individual trustees may waive fees or take similar amounts), attorney fees for trust interpretation, creditor issues, or beneficiary disputes ($250–$500/hour), accountant fees for trust income tax returns (Form 1041) and estate tax returns ($1,500–$5,000+), appraisal fees for real estate or business interests ($2,000–$10,000+), and court costs if trustee resignation, modification, or judicial accountings are required. For a simple trust with liquid assets, total administration costs may be 1–2% of trust value; for complex trusts, 3–5% or more.
How is a trustee compensated?
Trustee compensation depends on the trust document and state law. The trust instrument often specifies a fee schedule — typically a percentage of assets under management. If the trust is silent, state law determines 'reasonable compensation.' Corporate trustees (bank trust departments) charge 0.5–1.5% of assets annually, plus additional fees for transactions, tax preparation, and investment management. Individual trustees (family members, friends) are entitled to reasonable compensation but often waive fees when they're also beneficiaries. Trustee fees are taxable income to the trustee and deductible by the trust.
How long does trust administration take?
Trust administration after the grantor's death typically takes 9–18 months for uncomplicated trusts with liquid assets. The timeline stretches for several reasons: creditor notification periods (trusts are not required to go through probate, but prudent trustees notify creditors to start the clock on claims), real estate sales, business interests requiring valuation, out-of-state assets, estate tax returns (due 9 months after death, with a possible 6-month extension), and distribution to multiple beneficiaries or continuing trusts for minor beneficiaries.
Does trust administration avoid probate?
Yes — that's the primary estate planning advantage of a revocable living trust. Assets held in the trust at death transfer to beneficiaries through the trust's private administration process without going through court. However, assets that were never transferred to the trust (a common oversight) must go through probate. 'Pour-over wills' are designed to catch these assets and direct them into the trust, but this still requires a probate proceeding for those assets. Trust administration may require filing a notice with some state courts, but no court supervision is needed for typical trust distributions.
What is a trustee's duty of accounting?
Trustees have a fiduciary duty to keep beneficiaries informed and must provide accountings upon request or as required by the trust document. A trustee accounting shows all trust transactions — income received, expenses paid, distributions made, and the current balance of trust assets. Most states require accountings at least annually and upon termination of the trust. Beneficiaries can petition the court to compel an accounting if the trustee refuses. Failure to provide accountings on request is a breach of fiduciary duty and grounds for trustee removal. Attorney fees to compel an accounting may be charged to the trust, not the trustee personally.
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