Five Quiet Hints You're Dealing with a Trust Fund Baby (2024)

There’s a plague online.

It screws with your ability to make money, start a side hustle, or run a startup.

Trust fund babies.

They’re those sons of b*tches that never have to worry about money because their family is stinking rich.

A great example is the Kardashians. Kim tells us we have to “get our f*cking asses up and work harder” to succeed in business.

Yet she started with $100M left behind in a trust fund from her famous daddy. She can fail 99 times in a row and still be a millionaire.

I’ve never seen the disease of trust fund babies talked about. So here goes.

Here’s how you spot one (more on that soon) so they don’t ruin your business, side hustle, or ability to make money online.

They go from zero to herofast

Five years ago I was sitting in a cafe sipping a $2 coffee quietly while reading my Harry Potter book.

A colleague comes in and screams “we all need to get a job with this customer!”

The latte went down the wrong hole and I coughed ferociously. (Story of my life.)

“What you talking about old man?” I said.

He goes on to tell me about a client three streets away that offered him a job. They have a fintech business. It’s doing millions of dollars and is only a few months old. In finance, that just doesn’t happen.

A few weeks later, we visit the client to update the information we need to give our risk team. The office has more than 50 desks and no employees. Kinda stranggggeee.

A softly spoken woman begins to tell us how they’re doing millions of dollars of transactions a day. They’d hired a senior executive from a big four consulting firm to represent them. He told us the same info.

To cut a long story short, weeks later we learned the supposed transactions were just them sending money to themselves and their family.

LOL.

The dude’s rich father funded the whole sh*tshow as a weekend hobby. They folded, never to be heard of again.

Overnight success is code for daddy’s play money.

Their life is a series of highlight reels

Ever spoken to someone who has no failures? I mean even if you’re freaking Keanu Reeves you’ve still failed a bunch of times.

Failure equals human.

These are trust fund babies. Their family protects them from anything that could go wrong to shield them… ohhh cutesies. Oh, and so they don’t get questioned at dinner parties about their children’s misdemeanors.

Expect to see a lot of rejection and failure in any success story. If you don’t, be suspicious as hell about whether generational money acted as a pillowed wall around the person’s life.

They don’t have to work and yet they stilleat

This might sound crazy, but loads of people don’t have to work.

They haven’t become CEO or made life-changing money either. And they didn’t win the lottery. Yet they live each day sipping frappuccinos outside cafes on palm-filled streets.

At first it makes zero sense.

Then you learn it’s trust fund money. Often, though, they legitimately do pay for their groceries and utilities (peanuts).

The part they don’t pay for is the roof over their head. That’s daddy’s investment property aka tax write-off. He pays for it while his little basket of specialness lives rent free.

Be wary of people that have never worked a day in their lives. It’s a red flag.

Something feelsoff

Sometimes you can’t put your finger on it. Something just feels off about a person you meet in business or through your side hustle.

It’s probably a trust fund baby. Trust your BS detector. Trust your gut.

They have daddy’s safetyblanket

Other times you meet this strange human and they legitimately do have skin in the game with whatever they’re doing.

Yet they seem to take bigger risks than commonsense would allow for.

That’s a trust fund baby too. Just like in 2008 when the investment banks gambled like drunken sailors on a trip to Las Vegas, trust fund babies can do the same.

Even if they’ve never been told, they know deep down in the co*ckles of their heart, daddy will come and rescue them with a fresh check from his checkbook if anything goes wrong.

Taking dumb risks is a sign. Be careful.

Why trust fund babies are bad foryou

All of this might sound like innocent millionaire games.

It’s not. People get hurt, I tell ya.

These trust fund babies ruin startups, investing, and side hustles. How? Their results are fake. But no one knows so they try to copy them.

It makes normal people have unrealistic expectations about what’s possible. They start to measure their results against the trust fund babies and get frustrated, so they quit too soon.

Things get worse when the silver spoon kids start giving advice. None of it is based on experience so it does more damage than good.

The lesson here is simple. Work with people who have real results. Don’t take money from a trust fund baby because they’ll likely take unnecessary risks — and when it all blows up daddy’s lawyer will be up in your face.

And if none of these five hints reveal the enemy, ask the trust fund baby this question: “Can you show me daddy’s bank account?”

Okay, joking. (Not really.)

Do business and be inspired by executors, not trust fund child actors.

Five Quiet Hints You're Dealing with a Trust Fund Baby (2024)

FAQs

Five Quiet Hints You're Dealing with a Trust Fund Baby? ›

"A person who has a lot of money set aside for them and has no responsibilities," describes one Urban Dictionary user. "Most don't even know what it feels like to lift a finger or even have a job. In some cases, they act like spoiled brats for the rest of their lives and depend on their parents too."

How do trust fund babies act? ›

"A person who has a lot of money set aside for them and has no responsibilities," describes one Urban Dictionary user. "Most don't even know what it feels like to lift a finger or even have a job. In some cases, they act like spoiled brats for the rest of their lives and depend on their parents too."

What is the psychology of a trust fund baby? ›

The sudden wealth greatly uplifts their lifestyle, usually without any thought of how to use it to benefit their future. Spending money that a person has not earned is easy and addicting. As we say: easy come, easy go. The trust fund individual's most difficult task is selecting how they spend or save the money.

How much money do trust fund babies have? ›

Less than 2 percent of the U.S. population receives a trust fund, usually as a means of inheriting large sums of money from wealthy parents, according to the Survey of Consumer Finances. The median amount is about $285,000 (the average was $4,062,918) — enough to make a major, lasting impact.

What is the trust fund syndrome? ›

What Is A Trust Fund Baby? A trust fund baby refers to someone whose parents created a trust account, which they benefit from. The term “trust fund baby” has a negative connotation, as it's associated with the stereotype of a spoiled individual who doesn't have to work.

Do trust fund babies pay taxes? ›

If the funds are deemed as coming from the trust's income—that is, earnings on its assets—the beneficiary does owe income tax on them. Whether it's taxed as regular income or capital gains depends on the nature of the funds (cash, dividends, etc.).

How to spot a trustafarian? ›

Wearing their hair in dreadlocks. Not all trustafarians have dreadlocks, but those who don't often wear oversized hats designed to hold dreadlocks anyway. Wearing ethnic clothing such as a dashiki or a Nehru jacket, often ragged and unwashed. Eating a vegetarian diet.

How to make your child a trust fund baby? ›

How to Set Up a Trust Fund for a Child
  1. Step 1: Purpose and Goals of Your Trust. Why are you planning to set up a trust? ...
  2. Step 2: Choose the Trust Type. ...
  3. Step 3: Choosing Trustees for your Fund. ...
  4. Step 4: Drafting the Agreement. ...
  5. Step 5: Fund the Trust. ...
  6. Step 6: Address Tax Considerations. ...
  7. Step 7: Maintain and Review the Trust.
Nov 6, 2023

What happens to trust fund kids? ›

Children are often beneficiaries of trust funds by parents or grandparents who want to pass along their assets. You can set the trust up to be dispersed when the child reaches a certain age, and you can set up a payment schedule or disperse it in one lump sum.

How much money is usually in a trust fund? ›

While some may hold millions of dollars, based on data from the Federal Reserve, the median size of a trust fund is around $285,000. That's certainly not “set for life” money, but it can play a large role in helping families of all means transfer and protect wealth.

Do trust funds get taxed? ›

A trust is subject to tax in California “if the fiduciary or beneficiary (other than a beneficiary whose interest in such trust is contingent) is a resident, regardless of the residence of the settlor.” See Cal. Rev. & Tax 1774(a).

How do trust funds pay out? ›

After their passing, the trustee can pass on the assets to the beneficiary(s) as per the grantor's instructions, whether that's through a regular income stream or a lump sum payment.

What are the bad things about trust funds? ›

The major disadvantages that are associated with trusts are their perceived irrevocability, the loss of control over assets that are put into trust and their costs.

Does a trust fund affect social security benefits? ›

In general, the trust will be considered a resource when applying or retaining SSI. With a revocable trust, the entire trust is the person's resource. With an irrevocable trust, if there are parts of the trust in which payments could be made to benefit the person, then that amount will be viewed as a resource.

Can you spend money from a trust fund? ›

Ultimately, trustees can only withdraw money from a trust account for specific expenses within certain limitations. Their duties require them to comply with the grantor's wishes. If they breach their fiduciary duties, they will be removed as the trustee and face a surcharge for compensatory damages.

How does a beneficiary get money from a trust? ›

Outright Trust Distributions

They consist of the trustee releasing each beneficiary's inheritance without any restrictions. Outright distributions can either be made as a single lump sum, or periodically. Prior to making outright trust distributions, the trustee will need to pay the trust's debts and taxes.

Can I take money out of my child's trust fund? ›

With an irrevocable trust, the transfer of assets is permanent. So once the trust is created and assets are transferred, they generally can't be taken out again. You can still act as the trustee but you'd be limited to withdrawing money only on an as-needed basis to cover necessary expenses.

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