Texas Grantor
Retained Unitrust

You can hire a lawyer to create a Grantor Retained Unitrust for you, or you can purchase a fill in the blank Grantor Retained Unitrust template from any number of online legal forms websites.

You arrange to have two witnesses age 18 or older that aren’t mentioned in your Grantor Retained Unitrust physically present at the time of your Grantor Retained Unitrust signing. Both witnesses must have a valid (can’t be expired) U.S government ID to show the Texas notary public.

You contact Mobile Austin Notary to schedule a date, time, and location to have one of our mobile Texas notaries travel to you and be physically present at your Grantor Retained Unitrust signing.

The signors of the Grantor Retained Unitrust must present a valid (can’t be expired) U.S government photo ID to the Texas notary public. Then sign the Grantor Retained Unitrust physically in front of both the Texas notary public and the two witnesses to legally execute the Grantor Retained Unitrust in Texas.

Grantor Retained
Unitrust Texas

A grantor retained unitrust is a type of irrevocable trust. The trust is set up to make payments to the donor of the trust (grantor) that are equal to a set percentage of the trust’s total value, as calculated on a certain day of the year.

Texas Requirements
To Execute A
Grantor Retained
Unitrust

Age

The testator (the person or people who will be signing the Grantor Retained Unitrust) must be at least 18 years old with one of these valid (can’t be expired) U.S government forms of photo identification which can be a U.S driver’s license, U.S passport, U.S state identification card, U.S License To Carry (LTC) card, or a U.S military/uniformed services ID card to show a Texas notary public. 

Capacity

The testator must be of sound mind (be fully conscious and lucid as well as capable of reasoning and making autonomous decisions), not be forced or deceived into signing the Grantor Retained Unitrust, and have the intention to pass on property at death.

It’s ok if someone, because of injury, trauma, or illness, can’t physically sign their full legal name. A personal mark of some sort made by the testator in front of a Texas notary public will legally suffice in extreme physical impairment situations.

Signature

A Grantor Retained Unitrust must be signed by the testator or another person at his or her direction and in his or her presence.

Witnesses

A Grantor Retained Unitrust, by Texas law, must be attested by two witnesses (the notary public cannot legally be one of the two witnesses in Texas) that are at least 18 years old and are considered non-interested third parties.

Meaning the two witnesses cannot be a named beneficiary, be married or directly related to a beneficiary or be mentioned in any capacity in the Grantor Retained Unitrust they are witnessing.

Witnesses must have a valid (can’t be expired) U.S government photo identification card which can be a U.S driver’s license, U.S passport (it cannot be a foreign passport or Visa), U.S state identification card (any U.S state), License To Carry (LTC) or a U.S military photo ID card to show a Texas notary public and they must sign in the presence of the testator.

Texas Notary Public

In the State of Texas a licensed Texas notary public must be present at a Grantor Retained Unitrust signing to verify the identities of all parties (Trust signors and the two adult witnesses) involved and witness the testator signing all the legal document paperwork that is included in the Grantor Retained Unitrust.

It is extremely important to make some type of Will or a Trust if you want to control the distribution of your estate.

If you die before you make a Texas Will or Texas Trust you are said to have died “intestate”, and your property will be distributed according to strict Texas probate laws. 

Mobile Austin Notary always recommends to consult with a lawyer, certified public accountant, and/or an estate, probate, or financial planner before you try to create or execute a Texas Grantor Retained Unitrust for your family, business or for yourself.

Disclaimer: The content on this page and website is only intended to be used as general legal terminology, research, and definition information.
It is not to be considered by anyone to be financial, accounting, estate and probate planning, legal advice or legal consultation in any shape or form.