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Month: April 2026
How to Protect a Child’s Inheritance From Creditors, Divorce, and Bad Decisions

On Behalf of O’Brien Law Firm, LLC

Posted on: April 21, 2026

Leaving assets to a child sounds simple until you ask the harder question: What happens after they inherit? In Mississippi, an outright gift may give the child full control, which can leave that money exposed to creditors, poor spending choices, or messy life events later. A stronger estate plan often uses a trust instead.

Trust Protection Basics

A trust lets you leave assets for a child without handing everything over at once. You choose a trustee, the person who manages the property, and you set the rules for when and how distributions happen.

Mississippi law recognizes spendthrift provisions, which restrict both voluntary and involuntary transfers of a beneficiary’s interest. That matters because it can help block many creditor claims before money reaches the child directly. Mississippi law also treats a discretionary interest as a mere expectancy, not a property right that a creditor can automatically seize.

Distribution Rules That Add Real Protection

The structure of the inheritance matters just as much as the document itself. A trust can authorize the trustee to pay for health, education, maintenance, or support instead of making unrestricted cash distributions. It can also stagger distributions by age or milestone rather than turning over everything at once.

By contrast, a custodial transfer under Mississippi’s transfers-to-minors law usually places the property under a custodian only until the beneficiary reaches the statutory age, which is typically 21 in Mississippi. That approach may work for smaller gifts, but it gives less long-term control than a trust.

Once inherited funds pass outright to an adult child, those assets become much harder to shield from overspending, creditor pressure, or later disputes. A trust can also allow the trustee to pay expenses directly for the child’s benefit, which may provide more protection than simply writing checks to the beneficiary.

Frequently Asked Questions

How can I protect my child’s inheritance from creditors?
One of the most effective tools is a trust. Instead of leaving assets outright to a child, a trust can hold and manage the inheritance under rules you choose, which may help reduce exposure to creditor claims.

Why is a trust better than giving an inheritance directly to a child?
An outright inheritance gives the child full control of the assets. A trust allows you to name a trustee and control how and when money is distributed, which can help guard against overspending, financial mistakes, and outside claims.

What is a spendthrift trust provision?
A spendthrift provision is language in a trust that limits a beneficiary’s ability to transfer their interest and can help prevent many creditors from reaching trust assets before distribution.

Can a trust help protect inherited assets in a divorce?
A trust may help reduce the risk that inherited assets become vulnerable during divorce, especially when funds stay inside the trust and are not distributed outright. Protection depends on the trust terms and how the assets are handled.

What rules can be added to a child’s inheritance trust?
A trust can direct distributions for health, education, maintenance, or support. It can also stagger distributions by age or milestone so the child does not receive everything at once.

Is a custodial account the same as a trust?
No. A custodial account can work for smaller transfers, but it typically ends when the child reaches the statutory age. A trust usually offers better long-term control and flexibility.

Can the trustee pay expenses directly instead of giving money to the child?
Yes. The trustee can often pay approved expenses directly for the child’s benefit, which may provide more protection than handing over unrestricted cash.

When should I talk to an estate planning lawyer about inheritance protection?
You should consider it any time you want to leave meaningful assets to a child and want to reduce risks involving creditors, divorce, immaturity, or poor money decisions.

Build the Plan Around the Child

The best plan depends on the child, the assets, and the risks you want to reduce. O’Brien Law Firm, LLC, provides estate planning, wills, trusts, probate, elder law, and related planning services in Mississippi. We can help you think through whether a trust, a simpler transfer tool, or a combination of documents makes the most sense for your family. Call 662-672-7619 or contact us through our contact form.

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What Happens to Your Tax Refund in a Bankruptcy Case?

On Behalf of O’Brien Law Firm, LLC

Posted on: April 21, 2026

A tax refund can feel like much-needed breathing room when money is tight. In a bankruptcy case, though, that refund may count as property that must be disclosed and, in some situations, turned over. The answer depends on timing, chapter type, and available exemptions. If you live in Mississippi, it also helps to know that state law gives some specific protection for tax refund proceeds. Here is what to look at before you file.

Tax Refunds and the Bankruptcy Estate

When you file bankruptcy, a legal “estate” is created. That estate generally includes all legal or equitable interests you have in property as of the filing date.

Federal bankruptcy law and its legislative history make clear that the right to a tax refund can be part of that estate. In practical terms, if part or all of the refund was earned before you filed, the trustee may treat that portion as bankruptcy property.

In Chapter 7, the trustee may use nonexempt property to pay creditors. In Chapter 13, the analysis looks different because debtors usually keep property and repay debts over time under a court-approved plan. Even so, refunds still matter and can affect plan treatment.

Mississippi Exemptions and Filing Timing

Mississippi offers unusually clear protection for some tax refunds. State law exempts up to $5,000 in federal tax refund proceeds and up to $5,000 in state tax refund proceeds. That does not mean every refund is fully safe.

Exemption issues can become more complicated if funds were mixed with other money before filing or if the refund exceeds the statutory limit. Commingling can also create problems when exempt refund proceeds lose their separate identity in a regular bank account.

Timing can change how a refund is treated. Filing before it arrives may create one set of issues, while filing after receipt may create another. Either way, you need to report it truthfully and provide tax records if the bankruptcy process requires them.

Frequently Asked Questions About Tax Refunds in Bankruptcy

Can my tax refund become part of my bankruptcy case?
Yes. A tax refund may be treated as part of the bankruptcy estate if some or all of it was earned before the filing date. That means the trustee may review whether any portion of the refund is available to creditors.

Are tax refunds treated differently in Chapter 7 and Chapter 13?
Usually, yes. In Chapter 7, nonexempt property may be used to pay creditors. In Chapter 13, you generally keep your property and repay debts over time under a plan, but tax refunds can still affect how the case is handled.

Does Mississippi protect tax refund money in bankruptcy?
Mississippi law provides unusually specific protection for some refund proceeds, including up to $5,000 in federal tax refund proceeds and up to $5,000 in state tax refund proceeds. Whether your full refund is protected depends on the amount and how the money is handled.

Why does timing matter when filing bankruptcy?
Timing can change how a refund is treated. Filing before the refund arrives may create one set of issues, while filing after you receive it may create another. In either case, the refund must be disclosed truthfully.

Can mixing refund money with other funds cause problems?
Yes. The article explains that commingling can make exemption issues more complicated because exempt refund proceeds may lose their separate identity in a regular bank account.

Should I talk to a bankruptcy attorney before filing if I expect a refund?
Yes. The page recommends reviewing refunds, exemptions, and filing timing before filing so you can better evaluate Chapter 7 and Chapter 13 options.

Talk With O’Brien Law Firm, LLC

At O’Brien Law Firm, LLC, we help clients in Mississippi evaluate Chapter 7 and Chapter 13 options and look closely at issues like refunds, exemptions, and timing before filing. If you are concerned about how bankruptcy may affect your tax refund, call 662-672-7619 or contact us through the form.

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