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LLC & Trust Formation

28
  • At what portfolio levels should I set up different structures: LLC, trust, PPLI?
  • At what portfolio value does setting up an LLC start to make financial sense versus just continuing to buy more crypto?
  • What’s the cost to set up a Family Trust in Australia for digital assets?
  • What are the costs for a digital asset protection trust, and why is it more expensive than basic options?
  • What are all the costs involved—setup fees, payment options (including credit card), any available discounts, and ongoing annual maintenance/compliance fees?
  • How does an existing living will integrate with a new trust for digital assets—does the trust make the will obsolete?
  • If I already have an LLC in another state, can I convert or transfer it to Wyoming, or must I create a new one?
  • Can I use an existing LLC from another state, or do I need to create a new Wyoming LLC specifically for digital assets?
  • How do I update or amend my LLC or trust documents after they’re initially set up?
  • Can you provide templates or guidance for maintaining LLC minutes, records, and other compliance documentation?
  • What specific provisions should my operating agreement include for digital assets that generic templates miss (private key management, forks/airdrops handling, multi-sig governance, emergency access, staking operations, cross-chain asset management)?
  • Should I list my wallet address, cold wallet device, or device serial number in the operating agreement for legal clarity?
  • Does my LLC’s operating agreement need to be filed with the state, or is it a private document that just gets notarized?
  • How do I customize the operating agreement specifically for digital asset management, transfers, and my unique situation?
  • What does a registered agent do for my Wyoming LLC, can your firm act as one, and what are the associated fees?
  • Is there a fast-track or priority option to speed up formation without waiting for standard consultation timelines?
  • What specific documents and information do I need to provide to start the LLC or trust formation process?
  • What is the complete process for setting up a Wyoming LLC to hold and protect digital assets, including all required documents, operating agreement customization, EIN registration, and typical timeline?
  • What are Governance frameworks for family crypto investments?
  • Do I need a specific business entity for trading digital assets?
  • What crypto tax haven strategies for US residents exist for crypto investors?
  • How can high earners reduce capital gains tax on crypto?
  • What is a Family limited partnership for cryptocurrency
  • What are the benefits of moving crypto into an LLC
  • Why should I avoid an S-Corp for digital assets, and when does it make sense?
  • Does the tax designation of my LLC matter (S-Corp vs. disregarded entity), and what salary should I pay myself to comply with S-Corp rules?
  • What’s the structure for using a qualified trustee, private trust company, and LLC together in Wyoming for maximum protection?
  • What’s the difference between using an LLC versus a trust for digital assets, and which structure is better for my specific situation?

Asset Transfers & Tax Planning

6
  • Is the first $5,000 of LLC formation costs tax deductible, and what other professional fees can be written off?
  • What specific expenses can I write off through my digital asset LLC (hardware wallets, security devices, trading software, subscriptions, conferences, home office, portion of utilities/insurance, vehicles over 6,000 lbs under Section 179)?
  • How do DeFi activities, airdrops, yield farming, and liquidity pools get taxed, and what software helps track these complex transactions?
  • Does every crypto-to-crypto swap trigger a tax event?
  • Should I set up the LLC now or wait until after my assets appreciate in value? What are the risks of waiting?
  • How do I transfer digital assets from personal wallets, exchanges, or retirement accounts (IRAs, 401ks) into an LLC or trust without triggering taxable events?

Custody & Security

14
  • What are the withdrawal procedures, limits, and fees for accessing funds or assets once they’re in custody?
  • How can I remove single points of failure in crypto storage
  • Does Crypto custody have insurance against theft and hacking
  • What is the safest way to store crypto for a family office?
  • Institutional grade crypto custody for private clients
  • How to secure large amounts of cryptocurrency for high net worth individuals?
  • How do I pay monthly Anchorage custody fees without creating taxable events, especially if income fund slots only pay quarterly?
  • What custody fees do large XRP holders pay at DWP?
  • What are the detailed steps to onboard with Digital Wealth Partners for institutional custody?
  • What are Internal controls for family office digital asset treasury management?
  • How can I insure personal crypto holdings?
  • What’s the minimum to work directly with Anchorage outside of DWP?
  • What is the difference between MPC technology and HSM (Hardware Security Modules), and why do institutional custodians use level 4 military-grade facilities for key storage?
  • What is institutional custody, what are its five defining characteristics (crime insurance, bankruptcy-remote, segregated accounts, proper licensing, HSM hardware standards), and how does it differ from holding assets on a cold wallet or exchange?

Banking & Exchange Setup

7
  • Which exchanges work for LLC accounts if I’m in New York, and what are the setup fees?
  • What business type should I select on Kraken for a digital asset LLC, and what NAICS codes are appropriate?
  • What documents do I need to upload when setting up a business exchange account, and why should I exclude Schedule 3 (capital contributions) but include Schedule 1 (ownership percentage)?
  • What address do I give exchanges when they ask for “principal operating address” versus business address?
  • Why do I need to “season” my bank accounts before price appreciation, and what happens if I suddenly deposit large crypto proceeds into a personal account with no transaction history?
  • Why do banks refuse to open accounts for crypto-related businesses, what NAICS codes should I use when talking to banks, and which banks are currently crypto-friendly?
  • How do I open a crypto-friendly bank account for my Wyoming LLC, which banks work best, and can your team help with this?

Yield, Returns, Lending & Borrowing

8
  • Can an LLC or trust participate in airdrops or staking without tax implications if I use a multisig wallet where I lack full dominion/control?
  • How do I cover interest payments on a crypto-backed loan?
  • What is a responsible loan-to-value (LTV) ratio for borrowing against my crypto, and what risks should I consider given asset volatility?
  • How do I borrow against my crypto as collateral without selling it, what are the steps, and what risks should I watch for?
  • What counterparty risks exist with DeFi protocols like Compound or centralized options like Nexo, compared to institutional custody lending?
  • What’s the safest way to earn yield on BTC, XRP, and ETH without selling?
  • What yield can I expect from XRP in institutional custody today, and what yields might be possible after XRPL amendments pass?
  • What options exist for earning yield, staking, or lending my XRP and other digital assets while keeping them in custody, and what are the risks?

Compliance & Corporate Veil Protection

8
  • What is your protocol if a custodian we use becomes insolvent or faces regulatory action?
  • How do you handle ‘proof of reserves’ or audits for our private family treasury?
  • If we have family members in different jurisdictions (e.g., US and Europe), how does that affect our crypto entity structure?
  • Does an LLC need to generate revenue or profit, or can it sit idle?
  • What is the Corporate Veil Protection Program, what does it include, and what does the annual fee cover?
  • What annual compliance tasks are required to keep a Wyoming LLC active—filings, minutes, renewals, fees, and record-keeping?
  • What written actions and written consents are required for moving assets in and out of my LLC, and why is this necessary even when transactions are recorded on a public blockchain?
  • What causes 95% of LLCs to have their corporate veil pierced, and what specific mistakes should I avoid (personal expenses from LLC wallet, missing annual meetings, commingled assets)?

Estate Planning & Family Structures

11
  • Can a Trust Own a Crypto LLC?
  • How to Structure Crypto Estate Planning to Ensure Seamless Wealth Transfer
  • What’s the difference between the immediate creditor protection from an LLC (charging orders) versus the longer-term probate avoidance from a trust?
  • When does an asset protection trust make sense, and how long does it take to “season” before full protection kicks in?
  • How do I set up estate planning structures (revocable living trusts, family trusts, charitable remainder trusts) to protect assets, minimize taxes, and facilitate generational wealth transfer?
  • What happens to my crypto if I die without a will?
  • What are crypto inheritance execution services?
  • Can I put cryptocurrency into a Living Trust?
  • How to pass Bitcoin to heirs without sharing private keys
  • How should I structure digital assets held jointly with my spouse in an LLC or trust?
  • How do I add family members or beneficiaries to my LLC or trust while retaining decision-making control, and what are the tax and inheritance implications?

Life Insurance Strategies

5
  • How can I use PPLI to retire my parents post-liquidity event?
  • What’s the difference between PPLI and IUL (Indexed Universal Life), and why does PPLI work better for digital assets?
  • What is Private Placement Life Insurance (PPLI), what’s the minimum to qualify, and how can I fund it with XRP without cashing out?
  • What options do you have for integrating life insurance policies with my digital asset strategy?
  • How do I set up infinite banking or cash flow life insurance using my digital assets as collateral or funding?

International Clients

6
  • For Canadians with $10M+ in digital assets, what strategies exist to arbitrage different tax rates between personal holdings, corporations, and trusts across tax years?
  • What are the “GILTI” rules (Global Intangible Low Tax Income) that affect US citizens trying to use offshore corporations?
  • What is the Section 85 rollover in Canada, and how does it allow Canadians to move crypto into a corporation without triggering immediate tax consequences?
  • How does Canada’s capital gains inclusion rate work, and what changed when it increased to 67% for amounts over $250,000?
  • What options exist for offshore asset protection trusts (Cook Islands, Cayman, Bermuda, Nevis, Panama), and why does Panama have favorable US treaties?
  • Can non-US residents (UK, Canada, Australia, Europe, Dubai) use your services, and do you have local partners or recommendations for equivalent structures under foreign laws?

Charitable Giving & Nonprofit Structures

7
  • “Can we endow a scholarship fund using yield generated from stablecoins?”
  • “What is the most tax-efficient way to donate appreciated crypto to our family foundation?”
  • “How do we handle the ‘qualified appraisal’ requirements for donating NFTs or illiquid tokens over $5,000?”
  • “Can you set up a Donor Advised Fund (DAF) that accepts direct crypto contributions?”
  • How do charitable remainder trusts work with crypto, and why can’t crypto be held directly in some trusts?
  • What nonprofit structure options exist for digital assets (501c3 charities, 501c8 associations, private foundations, donor-advised funds)?
  • What strategies do you recommend for charitable giving or setting up foundations using appreciated digital assets to minimize taxes?

Privacy & Ongoing Asset Protection

5
  • How do I protect against scams and verify legitimate services?
  • How can I verify that a phone number, email, website, or social media account claiming to be Jake Claver or Digital Ascension Group/Digital Family Office is legitimate and not a scam?
  • How does setting up an LLC affect my ability to trade or move assets freely—are there restrictions?
  • If I set up an LLC now, will future crypto purchases or additions automatically be protected under it, or do I need to take additional steps?
  • How can I ensure anonymity and privacy with my LLC structure, especially for high-value holdings?

Investment Access & Business Strategy

19
  • How To Become a Crypto Financial Advisor
  • How to Verify Credentials of a Crypto Financial Advisor or Firm
  • How can I borrow against crypto assets for real estate purchase?
  • How can I start working on trategic exit planning for my crypto?
  • Tax efficient strategies for selling crypto
  • Tax efficient strategies for selling crypto
  • How to cash out large amounts of crypto without moving the market
  • How do we manage margin call risks if we leverage our crypto treasury for liquidity?
  • Can you help us structure a ‘buy, borrow, die’ strategy specifically for our digital asset portfolio?
  • What lenders do you work with for crypto-backed loans that understand family office structures?
  • How can we borrow against our Bitcoin holdings to fund real estate purchases without triggering a taxable event?
  • Targeting DAG’s specific focus on liquidity without selling (mentioned in their insights).
  • Can digital assets be held as treasury assets in corporations like MicroStrategy does, and what tax benefits exist if the business actually uses the network?
  • What businesses would you acquire for passive income post-appreciation?
  • What credit cards offer cashback in XRP, and how can I use everyday spending to accumulate more crypto?
  • Do you offer help with purchasing XRP or other digital assets from the start, including guidance on where and how to buy safely?
  • How do I start the accreditation process through Parallel Markets, and what documentation do I need?
  • What’s the difference between being an “accredited investor” versus a “sophisticated investor”?
  • Can I use my new LLC to access pre-IPO investments?

Integration & Additional Services

5
  • What are the benefits, membership levels, and costs of joining mastermind groups like Carbon I or II? Are there referral programs or discounts?
  • What is the full range of concierge services available through the Digital Family Office?
  • Can your team handle complete management of all my finances—taxes, paperwork, compliance, and generating passive income from assets?
  • How do I integrate my existing financial team (CPAs, attorneys, advisors) with your services, and can you recommend crypto-friendly professionals who work well with Wyoming LLCs?
  • Can I integrate real estate, physical assets (gold, silver), traditional investments, or existing financial structures into the same LLC or trust as my digital holdings?

Contact, Scheduling & Support

37
  • Crypto Financial Advisor in Bentonville and Northwest Arkansas
  • Crypto Financial Advisor in Stamford and Fairfield County
  • Crypto Financial Advisor in Little Rock
  • Where to Find a Crypto Financial Advisor in Los Angeles
  • Crypto Financial Advisor in Naples, Florida
  • Crypto Financial Advisor in Memphis
  • Finding a Crypto Financial Advisor in San Francisco
  • Crypto Financial Advisor in Palm Beach
  • Crypto Financial Advisor in San Jose and Silicon Valley
  • Crypto Financial Advisor in Greenville, South Carolina
  • Crypto Financial Advisors in Washington DC
  • Crypto Financial Advisor in Dallas-Fort Worth
  • Crypto Financial Advisor in Kansas City
  • Crypto Financial Advisors in Chicago
  • Crypto Financial Advisor in Las Vegas
  • Crypto Financial Advisor in Houston
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  • Finding a Crypto Financial Advisor in Philadelphia
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  • Crypto Financial Advisor in Jackson Hole
  • Crypto Financial Advisor in New Orleans
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  • Crypto Financial Advisor in Boston
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  • Crypto Financial Advisor in Seattle
  • Crypto Financial Advisor in Detroit
  • Crypto Financial Advisor in San Diego
  • Finding a Crypto Financial Advisor in Miami
  • Crypto Financial Advisor in Denver
  • Crypto Financial Advisors in the New York Metro Area
  • How do I get in touch with specific team members like Dan Plasket or Mike Sarmiento for help?
  • Can I get a refund or adjustment if I accidentally overpaid or encountered errors during checkout?
  • What should I do if I haven’t heard back after submitting my inquiry, and how do I follow up on status?
  • How does your team handle clients who are retired or living on fixed incomes with limited current cash flow?
  • Is it possible to have a short introductory call before committing to paid services just to clarify my options?
  • How do I schedule a consultation (phone, Zoom, or in-person), and what should I do if I’m having technical issues with booking or payments?
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  • Trust-Owned LLCs: Setup for Asset Protection

Trust-Owned LLCs: Setup for Asset Protection

If you’ve accumulated serious wealth, especially in crypto, you’ve probably thought about what happens when someone sues you. Or what happens when you die, and your estate goes through probate while your family fights over who gets what.

A Trust-Owned LLC solves both problems at once. It’s an LLC where the ownership interests sit inside a trust instead of being held by you personally. This creates two layers of protection that are harder to crack than either structure alone.

Most people use one or the other. Using both is better.

How the Structure Actually Works #

The LLC owns your assets. The trust owns the LLC. You don’t own either one directly.

When someone sues you personally, they can’t easily get to assets inside an LLC you don’t technically own. When you die, the trust controls what happens to the LLC interests without going through probate.

The trust names a trustee who manages the LLC according to whatever rules you wrote into the trust document. The LLC operates however you structured the operating agreement. Neither one depends on you being alive or solvent.

This separation is the point. Assets aren’t in your name. Liability doesn’t flow directly to you. Estate Planning happens according to your instructions, not probate court rules.

Why People Actually Use This #

Creditor protection: You get sued. The plaintiff wins. They try to collect by going after your assets. If those assets are in an LLC owned by a trust, they’re hitting two legal barriers instead of one. First, they need to pierce the LLC’s liability shield. Then they need to attack the trust structure. This is annoying enough that many creditors give up or settle for less.

Probate avoidance: When you die, assets titled in your name go through probate. Assets in a trust don’t. The LLC interests transfer according to the trust terms, not court proceedings. Your family gets access faster, and the whole process stays private instead of becoming public record.

Privacy: Public records show the trust owns the LLC, not you personally. Someone searching your name won’t find a direct connection to specific assets. This matters if you’re trying to stay off lists that target high-net-worth individuals.

Liability separation: The LLC isolates business or investment risks from your personal life. If an investment inside the LLC goes bad or generates a lawsuit, the problem stays contained within the LLC structure.

What This Does for Digital Assets #

Crypto makes this structure more valuable, not less.

Your Bitcoin sitting in a Wallet you control personally is an easy target. If someone sues you and wins, they can try to compel you to turn over the private keys. If you die, those keys might be lost forever or end up in probate while your estate figures out what you owned.

A Trust-Owned LLC changes this:

  • The LLC owns the Wallet, not you
  • The trust controls the LLC and provides succession instructions
  • Creditors can’t easily force you to hand over something you don’t legally own
  • When you die, the trustee maintains control and distributes according to your plan

The structure also helps with operational security. Assets held in an LLC with proper Custody arrangements are harder to steal than assets sitting in a personal Wallet. If you’re holding seven or eight figures in crypto, this separation becomes necessary.

Estate Planning Benefits #

Traditional Estate Planning focuses on avoiding probate and controlling distributions. A Trust-Owned LLC handles both.

No probate: The trust owns the LLC interests. When you die, those interests pass according to the trust document. No court involvement. No public filing. No months of waiting for a judge to approve distributions.

Controlled distributions: You can structure the trust so your kids get income but not principal until they’re 35. Or so distributions happen gradually instead of in a lump sum. Or so a trustee has discretion to cut off distributions if a beneficiary develops a drug problem.

Without a trust, your heirs get everything immediately (after probate). With trust, they get what you decided they should get, when you decided they should get it.

Multi-generation planning: Some states let you create dynasty trusts that last for centuries. Wyoming allows 1,000 years. South Dakota has no time limit. Put an LLC inside one of these trusts and you can control wealth for your great-great-grandchildren.

The LLC provides operational flexibility (you can change investments, add assets, restructure) while the trust provides continuity (the structure survives regardless of what happens to individual family members).

The Setup Details That Actually Matter #

Corporate formalities: If you treat the LLC like a personal piggy bank, courts will ignore the liability protection. Keep separate bank accounts. Don’t pay personal expenses from LLC funds. Maintain actual records of LLC decisions. Follow your own operating agreement.

Operating agreement: This document controls how the LLC runs. Who makes decisions. How distributions work. What happens if someone wants out. If you don’t have a detailed operating agreement, state default rules apply, and those rules probably aren’t what you want.

Trustee powers: The trust document needs to explicitly grant the trustee authority to manage LLC interests. This includes voting rights, the ability to sell or transfer interests, and how distributions from the LLC flow through the trust to beneficiaries.

Jurisdiction: Where you form the LLC and where you establish the trust both matter. Some states have stronger asset protection laws. Some have better privacy protections. Wyoming and South Dakota are popular for trusts. Delaware and Wyoming are popular for LLCs. Your situation determines which combination works best.

Funding: You need to actually transfer assets into the LLC. Saying “the LLC owns my Bitcoin” doesn’t work if the Bitcoin is still sitting in a Wallet you control personally. Proper funding means changing legal ownership, updating Custody arrangements, and documenting the transfers.

Common Ways People Break This #

Mixing personal and LLC money: Using the LLC bank account to pay your mortgage destroys the liability protection. Courts call this “commingling” and will pierce the corporate veil when they see it.

Not funding the trust: Creating a trust and then never transferring the LLC interests into it means you still personally own the LLC. You’ve paid for a structure you’re not actually using.

Sloppy documentation: No operating agreement, no trust amendments when situations change, no records of LLC meetings or decisions. When someone challenges the structure, weak documentation means weak protection.

Ignoring Compliance: LLCs need annual filings in most states. Trusts have reporting requirements. Miss these deadlines and you can lose good standing, which weakens asset protection.

DIY legal documents: Using templates you found online instead of having an attorney draft proper agreements. These templates usually don’t account for digital assets, multi-state issues, or specific creditor protection strategies.

What Digital Ascension Group Actually Does #

We coordinate the setup process. We don’t draft legal documents (your attorney does that) or give tax advice (your CPA does that).

What we do:

  • Help you figure out which state makes sense for your LLC and trust based on your specific assets and goals
  • Coordinate with your legal team to make sure the structure accommodates digital assets properly
  • Work with Custody providers to ensure assets transfer into the LLC correctly
  • Set up administrative workflows so Compliance doesn’t fall through the cracks
  • Connect the LLC structure to your broader estate plan and Investment Strategy

Digital Wealth Partners (our affiliated RIA) handles investment management inside the structure. Your attorney drafts the operating agreement and trust documents. Your CPA handles Tax Planning. We coordinate between all of them so the structure actually works.

Who Needs This #

You probably need this if:

  • You’re holding $5 million+ in investable assets
  • A meaningful portion is in crypto or other digital assets
  • You’re concerned about lawsuit risk from your business or profession
  • You want Estate Planning that doesn’t force your family through probate
  • Privacy matters to you

You probably don’t need this if:

  • Your net worth is under $1 million
  • You’re comfortable with standard Estate Planning (will, simple trust)
  • The cost and complexity outweigh the benefits for your situation

The structure makes sense when the risks you’re protecting against are real, and the assets you’re protecting are substantial.

Where This Is Going #

More states are updating LLC and trust laws to accommodate digital assets. More attorneys are learning how to draft documents that work for crypto Custody. More institutional custodians are building infrastructure that integrates with trust-owned structures.

Regulatory clarity is improving. The IRS has issued guidance on how trusts holding crypto should report. States are passing laws that explicitly recognize digital assets as property that can be held in trust.

This means Trust-Owned LLCs for crypto holders are moving from “experimental structure a few attorneys know about” to “standard practice for serious wealth.”

The Real Tradeoff #

A Trust-Owned LLC costs more and requires more maintenance than just holding assets in your own name.

You’ll pay for:

  • Legal drafting (operating agreement, trust document, potentially $10k-$30k depending on complexity)
  • Annual LLC fees ($100-$800 depending on state)
  • Trustee fees if you’re using a professional trustee (typically 0.5%-1.5% of assets annually)
  • Ongoing Compliance and administration

In Exchange, you get:

  • Creditor protection that’s harder to break
  • Estate Planning that avoids probate and controls distributions
  • Privacy that keeps your name off public records
  • A structure that can last for generations

For most people holding serious crypto wealth, this tradeoff makes sense. The cost is annoying. The alternative is worse.

Updated on February 13, 2026

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Table of Contents
  • How the Structure Actually Works
  • Why People Actually Use This
  • What This Does for Digital Assets
  • Estate Planning Benefits
  • The Setup Details That Actually Matter
  • Common Ways People Break This
  • What Digital Ascension Group Actually Does
  • Who Needs This
  • Where This Is Going
  • The Real Tradeoff
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Digital Ascension Group is affiliated with Digital Wealth Partners and Xure Legacy. Digital Wealth Partners is a Registered Investment Adviser (RIA) firm licensed to provide investment advisory services. Insurance-related services are handled through Xure Legacy, a licensed Insurance agency. Any discussions or references to investment advisory or Insurance services on this site are directed to these affiliated entities, which are solely responsible for providing those services in accordance with applicable regulations. The information blog articles on this site are for educational purposes only and is not financial, legal, or investment advice. While we strive for accuracy, we make no guarantees about the reliability or completeness of the content. Digital Asset investments may be speculative and volatile. Market conditions, regulatory environments, and technology changes can significantly impact their value and associated risks. Readers should conduct their own research and consult a qualified financial advisor or legal professional before making investment decisions. We do not endorse any specific Cryptocurrency, Investment Strategy, or Exchange mentioned in published articles. The examples are illustrative and may not reflect actual market conditions. Investing in cryptocurrencies involves the risk of loss and may not be suitable for all investors. By using published articles, you agree to hold Digital Ascension Group and its associated parties harmless from any claims, losses, or liabilities arising from your reliance on the information provided. Always exercise caution and use your best judgment in investment activities. We reserve the right to update or modify this disclaimer at any time without prior notice.

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