Everything You Need to Know About a Certificate of Trust Form
What is a Certificate of Trust?
A Certificate of Trust (also called a Memorandum or Abstract of Trust) is a summarized version of a trust document. It allows trustees to verify their authority to act on behalf of the trust without disclosing confidential details of the full trust agreement.
Who Should Use a Certificate of Trust?
- Trustees managing real estate or financial accounts
- Banks and lenders requiring trust verification
- Title companies processing trust-held property
- Estate administrators handling trust assets
- Individuals conducting transactions on behalf of a trust
When to Use a Certificate of Trust?
You should use this document when:
- Opening or managing bank and investment accounts
- Buying, selling, or refinancing property held in a trust
- Proving trustee powers to third parties
- Keeping trust terms private while confirming authority
- Transferring assets into or out of the trust
Key Information Required
- Affiant’s name and statement of authority
- Trust name and confirmation the trust is active
- Whether the trust is revocable or irrevocable
- Date the trust was signed
- Trust’s Tax ID number
- Names and mailing addresses of:
- Settlor(s)
- Trustee(s)
- Successor trustee(s)
- Required number of trustee signatures
- Trustee powers (full or limited)
- Real estate description (if applicable)
- Affiant’s signature and notary acknowledgment
Why is a Certificate of Trust Important?
This document protects privacy by allowing trustees to complete important transactions without revealing the full trust document. It also minimizes delays with financial institutions and provides legally recognized proof of trust structure and authority.
How to Fill Out a Certificate of Trust
- Download the Certificate of Trust from Zendocs.
- Enter the Affiant’s name and full trust name.
- Select whether the trust is revocable or irrevocable.
- Provide the trust signing date and tax ID number.
- List all settlors, trustees, and successor trustees with their addresses.
- Specify trustee signing requirements and powers.
- Add property details if real estate is held in the trust.
- Sign the document in front of a notary public.
Processing Notes
A Certificate of Trust must be notarized for validity. Certain states require it to be recorded for real estate transactions. Keep a copy for your records and provide it to financial institutions, title companies, and other relevant parties as needed.