Estate Planning Q&A Series

What information am I entitled to receive as a trust beneficiary while my relative is still alive? – North Carolina

Short Answer

In North Carolina, a beneficiary’s right to trust information while the relative (often the person who created the trust) is still alive depends heavily on whether the trust is revocable and whether the beneficiary is a qualified beneficiary with current rights. If the trust is revocable and the person who created it is alive and has capacity, the trustee’s primary duty to provide information usually runs to that person—not to future beneficiaries. If the trust is irrevocable (or has become irrevocable), qualified beneficiaries often can request key information such as a copy of the trust (or relevant portions) and an accounting, subject to reasonable limits and privacy concerns.

Understanding the Problem

In North Carolina estate planning, the practical question is: when a relative is still alive, can a named trust beneficiary require the trustee to share trust details such as the trust document, asset information, and spending records? This issue often comes up when family caregiving changes suddenly, capacity is declining (such as Alzheimer’s), and someone needs to confirm who has authority and whether trust funds are being used appropriately. The answer usually turns on whether the trust is revocable or irrevocable right now, and whether the beneficiary has a present interest or only a future expectancy.

Apply the Law

North Carolina trust administration is governed largely by the North Carolina Uniform Trust Code. A trustee generally has duties to administer the trust in good faith and to keep appropriate records. However, the trustee’s duty to share information is not the same in every trust. If the trust is revocable and the person who created it is alive and has capacity, the trustee typically answers to that person. If the trust is irrevocable (or becomes irrevocable at incapacity or death, depending on the document), then the trustee’s duties to inform and account typically extend to qualified beneficiaries, who may request information reasonably related to protecting their interests.

Key Requirements

  • What type of trust it is right now: Revocable trusts often limit what future beneficiaries can demand while the creator is alive; irrevocable trusts usually create stronger information rights for qualified beneficiaries.
  • Whether the person requesting information is a “qualified beneficiary”: Information rights are usually strongest for beneficiaries with a current right to distributions (or who would become eligible if current interests ended).
  • Whether the request is reasonable and tied to trust administration: Trustees generally must keep records and provide appropriate information, but they can push back on overly broad, harassing, or irrelevant requests and may need to protect sensitive information.

What the Statutes Say

Analysis

Apply the Rule to the Facts: The situation involves an older relative with Alzheimer’s living at home in North Carolina and a recent change in who is handling day-to-day decisions after the death of a parent who shared power of attorney responsibilities. If the older relative created a revocable trust and is still alive, the trustee may treat the older relative (or a legally authorized representative acting for the older relative) as the primary person entitled to detailed trust information. If the trust is irrevocable now (or if the trust terms shift control at incapacity), a qualified beneficiary may have stronger rights to receive a copy of the trust (or relevant portions) and an accounting that shows what came in, what went out, and why.

Process & Timing

  1. Who requests: The beneficiary (or, if appropriate, the beneficiary’s lawyer). Where: The request usually starts directly with the trustee in writing; if court involvement is needed, trust matters are commonly handled through the Clerk of Superior Court in the North Carolina county tied to the trust’s administration. What: A dated written request asking for specific items (for example, the trust instrument or relevant excerpts, a current asset list, and a transaction-level accounting for a defined period).
  2. Trustee response: The trustee typically responds by providing the requested information, explaining why certain items will not be provided (for example, because the trust is revocable and the creator is alive), or offering a narrower set of records. Timeframes can vary, but “reasonable time” is the usual standard in trust administration.
  3. If the trustee refuses or delays: The next step may be a petition or proceeding asking the Clerk of Superior Court for instructions, an accounting, or other relief. The court can order appropriate disclosures depending on the trust type, the requester’s status, and the purpose of the request.

Exceptions & Pitfalls

  • Being named in the trust is not always enough while the creator is alive: Many disputes come from assuming that a “future beneficiary” can demand full records immediately. In a revocable trust, the trustee may properly limit disclosures while the creator is living and able to act.
  • Confusing a trust issue with a power of attorney issue: A power of attorney controls who can act for the person; it does not automatically give every family member the right to trust records. If the older relative lacks capacity, the legally recognized decision-maker (for example, an agent under a valid power of attorney or a court-appointed guardian) may be the person positioned to request information on the older relative’s behalf.
  • Overbroad requests: Asking for “everything, ever” can slow resolution. A focused request (defined time period, specific categories, and a clear reason tied to trust administration) is more likely to get a meaningful response.
  • Privacy and sensitive information: Even when disclosure is appropriate, trustees may need to protect medical details, third-party information, or other sensitive records not necessary to explain trust administration.

For more background on beneficiary information rights and accountings, see our posts on trust beneficiary rights to information and updates and seeing the trust document and getting an accounting.

Conclusion

In North Carolina, a trust beneficiary’s right to information while a relative is still alive depends mainly on whether the trust is revocable and whether the beneficiary is a qualified beneficiary with a present interest. In many revocable trusts, the trustee’s main duty to provide detailed information runs to the living trust creator (or a lawful representative if the creator lacks capacity). A practical next step is to send the trustee a written, specific request for the trust document (or relevant parts) and a defined-period accounting, and then evaluate whether court involvement through the Clerk of Superior Court is necessary.

Talk to a Estate Planning Attorney

If you’re dealing with uncertainty about what a trustee must disclose while an older relative is still alive, our firm has experienced attorneys who can help you understand your options and timelines. Call us today at [919-341-7055].

Disclaimer: This article provides general information about North Carolina law based on the single question stated above. It is not legal advice for your specific situation and does not create an attorney-client relationship. Laws, procedures, and local practice can change and may vary by county. If you have a deadline, act promptly and speak with a licensed North Carolina attorney.