How to Protect Your Assets — The Complete 2026 Guide by Skabelund PLLC
Every Strategy.
The Right Order.
What Actually Works.
This is the most complete guide to protecting your assets available anywhere online — written by an attorney who spent a decade litigating these structures in court. Every strategy is explained, every common mistake is named, and the single most important variable — timing — is given the attention it deserves.
of the Year
U.S. News + Best Lawyers
Arizona & All 50 States
All Verified Platforms
Litigation Experience
How Asset Protection Actually Works —
The Legal Principle Behind Every Strategy
Asset protection is built on a single foundational legal principle: you cannot lose in a lawsuit what you do not own. When assets are properly transferred into legal structures before any legal threat exists, those assets are no longer yours in the eyes of the law. Courts cannot seize them to satisfy a judgment against you because they do not belong to you.
This is not a loophole. It is the same legal principle that prevents a creditor from seizing your neighbor’s car to pay your debt. Ownership is what creates exposure. Remove the ownership, and the exposure goes with it — as long as the transfer is done correctly, at the right time, for the right reasons, and using the right legal structure.
The three variables that determine whether a protection plan actually works are: (1) what structure is used — not all legal entities provide the same protection; (2) how it is funded — a trust or LLC with no assets inside it protects nothing; and (3) when it is established — the most important and most frequently misunderstood variable of the three.
What Is Actually Exposed in Your Estate Right Now
Before choosing how to protect your assets, you need an honest picture of what is and is not currently protected. Most people are surprised by how much is exposed.
Assets That Are NOT Automatically Protected
These assets are fully reachable by a civil judgment creditor without additional legal structures in place:
- Home equity above the state exemption cap — Arizona protects $425,000. Every dollar above that is exposed. In Paradise Valley or Scottsdale, that can mean $3M–$10M+ in unprotected equity.
- Investment and brokerage accounts — Fully exposed. No automatic protection exists for taxable investment accounts, regardless of the amount.
- Business interests in LLCs and corporations — Without a properly structured operating agreement and charging order provisions, business interests are reachable by personal creditors.
- Real estate other than a primary residence — Investment properties, rental properties, vacation homes, and commercial real estate carry no homestead protection.
- Bank account deposits above nominal amounts — Savings, operating accounts, and cash held in personal or business accounts are directly attachable by a judgment creditor.
- Personal vehicles and valuable personal property — Subject to limited exemptions (Arizona protects one vehicle up to $6,000 equity), but substantial value is exposed.
Assets That Carry Automatic or Statutory Protection
These assets receive some level of protection by operation of law — but the protection is limited and varies by state:
- Retirement accounts (IRA, 401(k), 403(b)) — ERISA plans (employer-sponsored) receive very strong federal protection. IRAs receive strong state protection in Arizona under A.R.S. §33-1126. Maximum protection available if structured correctly.
- Life insurance cash value and death benefit — Arizona protects life insurance proceeds and cash value under A.R.S. §33-1126(A)(1). Death benefits payable to a spouse or dependent are generally protected.
- Primary residence equity up to the cap — Arizona’s homestead exemption (A.R.S. §33-1101) automatically protects up to $425,000 of primary residence equity. Automatic — no filing required.
- Annuities — Arizona provides statutory protection for certain annuity payments under A.R.S. §33-1126(A)(6).
- Assets already inside a properly funded irrevocable trust or DAPT — The most comprehensive protection available, requiring affirmative legal action to establish.
How to Protect Your Assets —
Six Strategies That Work Under Real Legal Challenge
These six strategies form the complete architecture of a well-designed asset protection plan. Most plans use two or more in combination. The right combination depends on your specific assets, risks, and tax situation.
Form a Properly Structured LLC or Series LLC
The starting point for most asset protection plans is forming an LLC — but not just any LLC. The protection comes from the structure, not the paperwork. A properly designed LLC includes a real operating agreement with charging order provisions and transfer restrictions, manager-managed governance, strict separation of personal and business funds, and annual formalities that prevent veil-piercing. A Series LLC is particularly valuable for multi-property owners: it creates legally segregated “cells” so a lawsuit against one property cannot reach any other.
What the LLC does: it limits personal liability for business obligations, and it limits a personal creditor’s remedy against your business interest to a charging order — entitling them to distributions only if and when the business chooses to make them. What the LLC does not do: it does not protect personal assets from personal lawsuits, and it does not protect you from personal guarantees you have already signed.
Full Series LLC GuideEstablish a Domestic Asset Protection Trust (DAPT)
A Domestic Asset Protection Trust is the most powerful personal asset protection tool available under U.S. law. It is an irrevocable, self-settled spendthrift trust formed under the laws of a state that permits them (Arizona under A.R.S. §14-10821, or Nevada, South Dakota, Wyoming for more robust out-of-state options). The defining feature: you can remain a discretionary beneficiary — eligible for distributions at the trustee’s discretion — while assets are shielded from future creditors.
Assets inside a properly funded DAPT — investment accounts, cash, business interests — belong to the trust, not to you. Courts cannot seize trust assets to satisfy a personal judgment. Most DAPT states have a statute of limitations of 2–4 years after funding, after which the transfer is generally beyond creditor challenge. All funding must occur before any legal threat materializes.
Full DAPT GuideProtect Home Equity Above the Homestead Cap
Arizona’s homestead exemption automatically protects up to $425,000 of primary residence equity. For homeowners with equity significantly above that threshold — the majority of Scottsdale, Paradise Valley, and Phoenix homeowners — a second layer is necessary. Two tools accomplish this:
A Qualified Personal Residence Trust (QPRT) transfers the home into an irrevocable trust while you retain the right to live in it for a specified term. At the end of the term, ownership passes to beneficiaries at a significantly discounted gift tax value. Equity inside the QPRT is protected from creditors and removed from your taxable estate simultaneously. Alternatively, an irrevocable trust holding the property accomplishes similar creditor protection without the term structure.
Arizona Homestead GuideBuild an Irrevocable Trust Architecture
Irrevocable trusts serve dual purposes that most people do not realize can be achieved in a single structure: creditor protection and estate tax reduction. When assets are transferred into a properly designed irrevocable trust, they are removed from your taxable estate and shielded from future creditors. Dynasty trusts hold assets across multiple generations with creditor protection at every level. ILITs (Irrevocable Life Insurance Trusts) exclude death benefits from the taxable estate. Supplemental needs trusts protect inheritance for beneficiaries with creditors of their own.
The 2026 estate tax cliff makes irrevocable trust planning particularly urgent: the federal estate and gift tax exemption of $13.61 million per person sunsets December 31, 2025. Transfers into irrevocable trusts before that date lock in the higher exemption permanently, with no claw-back risk under IRS regulations.
Trust & Estate Planning GuideImplement Buy-Sell Agreements and Business Succession Structures
For business owners, a buy-sell agreement is one of the most important documents in any protection plan. It governs what happens to a partner’s interest when they die, become disabled, divorce, or face a personal judgment — preventing an unwanted heir, ex-spouse, or creditor from becoming your business partner. A cross-purchase buy-sell funded with life insurance provides immediate buyout liquidity at a fair, predetermined price.
Business succession planning goes further: it structures the transfer of business equity to the next generation or new ownership with minimal estate tax friction, using family limited partnerships, irrevocable trusts, and properly designed entity structures to preserve value across the transition.
Business Owner Protection GuideUse Privacy Structures to Reduce Visibility of Assets
The most effective asset protection plan is one that creditors never know to challenge. Privacy-based planning removes your name from publicly searchable ownership records — property records, business filings, court-accessible databases. When a would-be plaintiff’s attorney cannot find significant assets in your name, the likelihood of aggressive litigation decreases substantially.
Privacy structures include: LLC ownership held in trust names rather than personal names, nominee managers where permitted, trusts with private rather than public trust names, and proper structuring of business filings. Privacy is the first layer of protection — the one that prevents the situation from arising at all.
Privacy Planning GuideThe Complete Asset Protection Toolbox —
What Each Structure Does and Who It Is For
Asset protection is not a single tool — it is a family of structures, each with distinct mechanics, use cases, costs, and levels of protection. Here is a complete reference.
Domestic Asset Protection Trust (DAPT)
Self-settled irrevocable spendthrift trust. Grantor remains a discretionary beneficiary. Shields personal investment accounts, cash, and business interests from future creditors. Available in Arizona (A.R.S. §14-10821) and 20+ other states. Statute of limitations: 2–4 years by jurisdiction. Nevada and South Dakota are the strongest out-of-state options.
Full GuideLLC & Series LLC
Single LLC provides charging order protection and entity liability shield. Series LLC creates segregated cells — each with separate assets and liability — for multi-asset owners. Requires properly drafted operating agreement, manager-managed governance, and strict formality compliance to preserve protection.
Full GuideQualified Personal Residence Trust (QPRT)
Irrevocable trust holding primary or vacation home. Grantor retains right to live in property for a fixed term. At term end, ownership transfers to beneficiaries at discounted gift tax value. Protects equity above homestead cap from creditors. Significant estate tax reduction through remainder interest discounting.
Full GuideIrrevocable Trust & Dynasty Trust
Third-party irrevocable trusts remove assets from the taxable estate and protect them from the grantor’s creditors. Dynasty trusts hold assets in perpetuity (in Nevada, SD, Wyoming) with creditor protection at every generational level. Combined with 2026 estate tax cliff planning, dynasty trusts are among the most powerful long-term tools available.
Full GuideIrrevocable Life Insurance Trust (ILIT)
Irrevocable trust that owns a life insurance policy. Death benefit excluded from the grantor’s taxable estate. Cash value inside the trust is generally beyond creditor reach. Used alongside DAPTs and irrevocable trusts as part of a comprehensive layered plan. Particularly valuable for high-net-worth individuals with large life insurance policies.
Learn MoreFamily Limited Partnership (FLP)
Multi-asset entity structure with built-in valuation discounts for estate and gift tax purposes. General partners maintain control; limited partners hold economic interests. Creditors of limited partners receive only charging order protection. Particularly effective for families with multiple business interests, real estate portfolios, and investment assets to consolidate and transfer.
Full GuideThe Right Order to Build Your
Asset Protection Plan
One of the most common mistakes in asset protection planning is implementing structures in the wrong order — which creates either tax inefficiencies, underfunded entities, or plans that conflict with each other. Here is the correct sequence.
| Phase | What You Do | Why This Order Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Phase 1 First | Complete wealth and risk audit | Cannot design the right structure without understanding the full picture of assets, liabilities, and professional risk |
| Phase 2 | CPA coordination and tax planning | Every transfer has tax consequences. Design must happen within the tax plan, not around it |
| Phase 3 | Entity structuring: LLC, Series LLC | Business and real estate protection layer established first. Provides the base from which personal structures build |
| Phase 4 | Personal trust layer: DAPT, irrevocable trust | Personal asset shield built above the entity layer. Covers investment accounts, cash, business interests personally held |
| Phase 5 | Home equity protection: QPRT or irrevocable trust | Handled separately from general irrevocable trust due to real estate deed transfer requirements and specific gift tax treatment |
| Phase 6 | Full funding of every structure | Documents alone protect nothing. Every asset must be formally transferred into the structure that protects it |
| Phase 7 | Annual review | Plans become underfunded and outdated as wealth grows and laws change. Annual review is maintenance, not optional |
Timing Is the Most Important Variable
in Asset Protection Planning
More asset protection plans fail because of timing than because of poor structure. Here is the complete timing picture that every prospective client needs to understand before anything else.
The Uniform Voidable Transactions Act — Why Timing Is Everything
The Uniform Voidable Transactions Act (UVTA), enacted in most states including Arizona, allows courts to reverse asset transfers that were made to hinder, delay, or defraud creditors. Courts look at “badges of fraud” including:
- Transfer made shortly before or after a lawsuit was filed or threatened
- Transferor rendered insolvent by the transfer
- Transfer of substantially all assets at once
- Transfer to an insider (spouse, family member, business partner)
- Transferor retained possession or control after the transfer
The presence of multiple “badges” creates a rebuttable presumption of fraudulent transfer. Courts can unwind the transfer entirely — returning the assets to the judgment debtor’s estate for seizure.
Act Now, While All Options Are OpenWhen Protection Is Available — A Realistic Timeline
Before Any Threat Exists
All options available. Full DAPT, irrevocable trust, QPRT, LLC, dynasty trust. This is the only window where every tool works with full effectiveness.
General Professional Risk (No Known Claim)
All options remain available. A physician with general malpractice exposure but no current claim can still implement a full plan. This is the most common situation for proactive clients.
Known Dispute, No Lawsuit Yet
Options narrow significantly. Some transfers may still be made but require careful analysis. An attorney with litigation experience is essential at this stage. Act immediately.
Lawsuit Filed or Judgment Entered
Most protective transfers are voidable. Limited options remain. The window for planning has largely closed for the assets related to the claim.
Eight Mistakes That Void Asset Protection
Even After It’s Been Set Up
These are the most common ways a properly designed asset protection plan fails in practice. Every one of them is avoidable with correct implementation and ongoing compliance.
Waiting Until a Threat Exists
The most fatal mistake. Once a creditor claim is known or reasonably foreseeable, most protective transfers are subject to voidable transaction challenge. Every year of delay is a year in which all unprotected assets are fully exposed. The correct time to act is during a period of legal calm — which is always right now.
Forming an LLC Without Funding It
An LLC registered with the state but holding no actual assets protects nothing. Assets must be formally transferred: deeds recorded, LLC operating agreements signed, accounts re-titled. A trust document signed but never funded is equally useless. Funding is the step most often skipped — and it is the step that activates the protection.
Commingling Personal and Business Funds
Using a business account for personal expenses, or using personal accounts to pay business bills, is the most reliable way to have an LLC’s liability shield pierced by a court. Veil-piercing requires proving that the entity is merely an alter ego of the owner — and commingling is the strongest evidence of that. Strict, permanent separation is mandatory.
Retaining Too Much Control Over a Trust
For an irrevocable trust to provide creditor protection, the grantor must actually give up control. If the grantor serves as sole trustee, retains the unilateral power to distribute assets to themselves, or maintains control over investment decisions without an independent trustee, courts will treat the trust assets as still belonging to the grantor.
Using a Revocable Trust and Calling It Asset Protection
A revocable living trust provides zero creditor protection. Because the grantor retains the ability to revoke it, courts treat the assets as still belonging to the grantor. Millions of Americans have revocable trusts and believe they have asset protection. They do not. Only an irrevocable trust — where the grantor genuinely gives up control — creates the legal barrier that protection requires.
Failing to Coordinate with the CPA
Every asset protection structure has tax consequences: gift tax on trust transfers, income tax on grantor trusts, capital gains on appreciated assets, LLC tax elections affecting pass-through treatment. An attorney who designs structures without understanding the client’s tax situation can create plans that protect assets legally while triggering avoidable and significant tax events.
Never Reviewing or Updating the Plan
Asset protection plans become outdated. Laws change (the 2026 estate tax cliff is the most urgent example), asset values change, family circumstances change, and business structures evolve. A plan designed for your situation three years ago may be underfunded, misaligned, or structured under rules that no longer apply. Annual reviews are not optional maintenance — they are integral to the protection the plan provides.
Relying on a Template or Online LLC Formation
Online LLC formation services and template operating agreements do not include the charging order provisions, transfer restriction clauses, and governance structures that activate protection under Arizona law. A generic LLC operating agreement is often worse than no operating agreement at all, because it creates a false sense of protection without the substance behind it. Every protective structure must be custom-drafted by an attorney who understands asset protection specifically.
Who Needs Asset Protection Most Urgently —
and Who Can Wait
Asset protection is not equally urgent for every person. Here is an honest assessment of who should act immediately, who should act soon, and who may have more time.
Act Immediately: Physicians & High-Risk Professionals
Surgeons, anesthesiologists, OB/GYNs, and other high-risk specialists with significant personal wealth. Malpractice insurance has limits. One verdict above the policy ceiling can pursue personal assets. Every day without protection is a day of full exposure.
Act Immediately: Business Owners with Personal Wealth
Entrepreneurs and executives who have accumulated significant personal wealth alongside business equity. Personal guarantees, officer liability, and employment claims all create pathways to personal assets that entity structures alone do not close.
Act Immediately: Real Estate Investors
Every property is a potential liability. Without proper LLC structuring and a personal protection layer, a single lawsuit against one property can threaten every property you own and all personal wealth beyond it.
Act Immediately: High-Net-Worth Homeowners
Anyone with home equity significantly above the state homestead cap. In Arizona that means equity above $425,000 is exposed. For most Scottsdale, Phoenix, and Paradise Valley homeowners, that is the majority of their most significant asset.
Act Before Year-End: Estates Above $7 Million
The 2026 estate tax cliff sunsets the $13.61M per-person exemption on December 31, 2025. Irrevocable trust transfers made before the sunset lock in the higher exemption permanently. This is a one-time planning window that will not recur.
Plan Now, Not Later: Everyone With Significant Assets
The honest answer for anyone with assets worth protecting is: the best time is before any threat exists. That window is always open until the day it suddenly closes. Planning costs a known amount. Not planning costs an unknown amount — potentially everything.
Written and Implemented by These Two Attorneys
John Skabelund, J.D., M.B.A.
Founder & Lead Attorney — Attorney of the Year T&E 2023
10+ years trust & estate litigation. J.D. + MBA. The attorney who designed this guide spent a decade in court watching which plans hold up and which ones fail — then founded this firm to build the ones that hold.
“John is a great fit for anyone looking to add an asset protection attorney to their team. He is the legal quarterback for any business owner looking to protect and grow their wealth with peace of mind.”
Bryan L. Ramirez
CPA — Verified
“John and his firm are top notch in both knowledge and service excellence. His process is straightforward and transparent. What he is doing for the industry is simply a breath of fresh air.”
Adam Ripperdan
CPA — Phoenix Metro
Every Guide That Goes
Further Than This One
This guide covers the framework. Each link below is a complete guide to one component of the plan — written by the same attorney who will advise you.
How to Protect Your Assets —
The Most Common Questions Answered
Now You Know How to Protect Your Assets.
The Next Step Is Doing It.
Attorney of the Year — Trusts & Estates 2023. Top 1% of U.S. Attorneys. 10+ years litigation. Two Arizona offices. All 50 states. Flat fees. Annual reviews. The plan that holds up starts with one conversation.
The Asset Protection Show
Podcast by John Skabelund
YouTube · Apple · Amazon · Audacy