API Land Trust 
Protect your Investments. Secure your Future.
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How it works: A land trust is a type of trust specifically designed to hold and protect real estate. A land trust is a great tool to hold title to all types of real property.
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$1,995 API Land Trust
There are a variety of reasons why you may want to hold property in a land trust, chief among these are:
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Privacy: The primary reason to hold property in a land trust is the privacy that a land trust will afford you. Unlike when property is held in your own name, your ownership of property held in a land trust cannot be discovered simply by searching public records.
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Asset Protection: A land trust also protects the owner against liens and judgments attaching to the property due to lawsuits, compliance code violations, taxes, etc.
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Probate Avoidance: A land trust avoids probate. In other words, when the owner dies, the real estate held in the land trust can be passed on to his or her heirs without having to go through probate, saving both time and money.
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For The Distribution of Your Property: For some individuals, a land trust is an excellent alternative to a living trust as a way to posthumously distribute property in a manner that will avoid conflict between family members and other potential private beneficiaries.
The use of a land trust will also allow you to safely acquire new property. Furthermore, if you already have an LLC or a living trust, either (or both) can work very well in conjunction with a land trust.
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The information contained on this page is intended to help small entities comply with the beneficial ownership information reporting rule promulgated by the U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN). * This page is explanatory only and does not supplement or modify any obligations imposed by statute or regulation. Additionally, this page does not supersede more recent guidance documents issued by FinCEN. For additional information, consult The Reporting Rule, which implements Section 6403 of the Corporate Transparency Act. The rule describes who must file a BOI report, what information they must provide, and when they must file the reports. The Reporting Rule is found at 1010.380 in title 31 of the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR).
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