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Florida QTIP Trust

You want to take care of your spouse, and you want your kids to inherit. A QTIP trust does both, so you don’t have to choose.

It’s the blended-family answer: your spouse is provided for life, your children are guaranteed what’s left. Here is how it works.

The Problem It Solves

Here is the hardest knot in a second marriage. If you leave everything to your new spouse outright, they can later leave it to anyone, their own children, a future spouse, cutting your kids out completely. If you leave everything to your kids, your spouse may be left without enough to live on. A QTIP trust unties the knot: your spouse is supported for life, and when they pass, what remains goes to the people you chose, usually your children. Neither side has to depend on the other’s goodwill.

How a QTIP Trust Works

A trustee you name runs it, balancing your spouse’s needs against your children’s eventual inheritance.

A second marriage, and children from your first?

Book a free 30-minute consult. We will tell you honestly whether a QTIP trust is the right way to protect everyone.

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The Tax Side

A properly structured QTIP trust qualifies for the unlimited marital deduction, so no federal estate tax is due at the first spouse’s death; it is deferred until the survivor’s death. For most Florida families this is not the main draw (Florida has no estate tax and the federal exemption is high), but for larger estates the deferral plus the control over the ultimate beneficiaries are both real benefits. It does require a specific election on the federal estate tax return, which we coordinate. See Florida and estate tax →

When It’s Worth It (and When It Isn’t)

A QTIP trust shines for second marriages and blended families. For a straightforward first marriage where everyone trusts everyone, it is usually more structure than you need. We weigh it against simpler options, a clear revocable trust, a prenuptial agreement, and the homestead rules that already protect a spouse, and recommend only what your family actually requires.

Frequently Asked Questions

What Is a QTIP Trust?

A QTIP trust (Qualified Terminable Interest Property trust) is a trust that provides for your surviving spouse for the rest of their life, then passes what is left to the beneficiaries you chose, usually your own children. Your spouse receives all the income from the trust (and often access to principal for health and support), but cannot redirect where the trust goes at their death. You decide that, in advance. It is the classic tool for second marriages and blended families, because it lets you care for your spouse without disinheriting your kids.

How Does a QTIP Trust Help a Blended Family?

It solves the hardest problem in a second marriage: how to provide for your new spouse and still guarantee your children inherit. Leave everything to your spouse outright, and they can later leave it to anyone, including their own children or a future spouse, cutting yours out. A QTIP trust prevents that. Your spouse is supported for life, and when they pass, the remaining assets go to your children as you directed. Neither side is left to trust the other’s goodwill.

Does a QTIP Trust Save Estate Tax?

It can defer it. Property placed in a properly structured QTIP trust qualifies for the unlimited marital deduction, so no federal estate tax is due when the first spouse dies; the tax, if any, is deferred until the surviving spouse’s death. For most families this is not the main draw, because Florida has no estate tax and the federal exemption is high, but for larger estates the deferral and the control over the ultimate beneficiaries are both valuable. The trust requires a specific election on the federal estate tax return.

Who Controls a QTIP Trust After the First Spouse Dies?

A trustee you name manages it, for the benefit of your surviving spouse, under the rules you set. Your spouse gets the income and the security, but not the power to change who ultimately inherits. That separation, support for the spouse, control of the remainder for you, is the whole point. Choosing the right trustee matters, especially in a blended family, so the trustee can balance the spouse’s needs against the children’s interests fairly.

What Are the Downsides of a QTIP Trust?

It is more complex and costly to set up and administer than a simple plan, and it requires ongoing trust administration after the first death. Your spouse gives up the freedom to redirect the assets, which is the intended trade-off but can feel restrictive. And it must be drafted and elected correctly, or the tax benefits are lost. For a first marriage where everyone trusts everyone, it is usually overkill; for a blended family, the structure is often exactly what is needed.

Is a QTIP Trust Right for Me?

It is worth a serious look if you are in a second marriage, have children from a prior relationship, and want to provide for your current spouse without risking your kids’ inheritance. If your family is straightforward, simpler tools may do. We will tell you honestly at the consult whether a QTIP trust fits, or whether another structure (or a well-drafted prenuptial agreement and homestead plan) accomplishes your goal more simply.

Common Situations

The classic blended family. A man remarries and wants his wife cared for, but his house and savings to ultimately go to his children from his first marriage. A QTIP trust gives his wife income for life and sends the remainder to his kids, exactly as he intended.

The protected inheritance. A widow worries that if she leaves everything to her second husband, his children will inherit instead of hers. The QTIP trust removes the worry, his support is guaranteed, her children’s inheritance is locked in.

Sources of Law


Updated on June 8, 2026. Reviewed by Kevin D. Klagge, Esq., Fla. Bar No. 99502. General information about federal and Florida law, not legal or tax advice, and no attorney-client relationship is created. Whether a QTIP trust fits depends on your family and estate. Do not send confidential information until we have agreed to represent you.

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Book a free 30-minute consult. We will build the plan that protects everyone you love, the right way.

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