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Cook Islands Trust: Funding with Real Estate

Connor Steens
Last updated: July 2, 2026

Real estate cannot move offshore — a building stays in the US under US court jurisdiction regardless of who holds title. Deeding property directly to a foreign trust creates public record issues, risks triggering due-on-sale clauses, and doesn’t solve the core problem, since the property still sits under domestic court authority.

The standard approach uses an LLC layer: the property goes into a domestic LLC, and the LLC’s membership interest — not the property — transfers to the Cook Islands Trust. This protects the ownership chain without exposing the property deed to offshore complications.

This guide covers the LLC-layered approach, due-on-sale risk for mortgaged properties, when homestead property should stay outside the structure entirely, and when equity stripping is the more appropriate tool.

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Why You Can’t Transfer Real Estate Directly Offshore

Real estate is the asset class that creates the most friction in the trust funding process, and the reason is structural: real property cannot move offshore. A building in Texas or a rental portfolio in Florida stays exactly where it is, subject to the jurisdiction of the courts where it sits, regardless of who holds title. Placing a Cook Islands Trust’s name on the deed doesn’t change that — the property is still US real estate, subject to US court orders directed at the property itself.

Direct deeding also creates two additional problems. Recording a deed in the name of a foreign trust makes the ownership structure a matter of public record, removing the privacy the offshore arrangement was partly designed to provide. And most mortgage agreements include a due-on-sale clause giving the lender the right to call the full loan balance immediately if ownership transfers without their consent — so deeding mortgaged property to a foreign trust can accidentally trigger an immediate loan acceleration the settlor didn’t intend.

The Standard Approach: LLC Ownership Plus Trust Interest

The solution is an LLC layer. Rather than the trust holding the property directly, the property is deeded into a domestic LLC, and then the LLC’s membership interest — not the property — transfers to the Cook Islands Trust. The result is that the property stays titled in the LLC’s name, the LLC’s interest sits in the trust, and the trustee holds ownership of the LLC without the property’s title ever appearing in the trust’s name or any deed being filed offshore.

This achieves two things simultaneously. First, it keeps the ownership chain private: a search of the public property records shows the property owned by an LLC, not a foreign trust. Second, it puts the LLC interest under the protection of the Cook Islands Trust’s legal framework: a creditor wanting to reach the property now has to get through both the LLC and the trust, rather than having a direct line to the property from the settlor’s personal ownership.

Due-on-Sale Risk for Mortgaged Properties

Transferring mortgaged property into an LLC is the step that most commonly triggers due-on-sale concerns. The Garn-St. Germain Act provides a federal exception for certain residential property transfers — transferring a primary residence into a revocable living trust generally doesn’t trigger due-on-sale — but that exception doesn’t extend to investment properties, and it doesn’t apply to the transfer of the LLC’s interest to the Cook Islands Trust.

In practice, lenders rarely enforce due-on-sale clauses against LLC transfers for investment properties, particularly when the borrower remains in control of the LLC and the loan continues to be serviced normally. But “rarely enforce” isn’t the same as “doesn’t apply,” and the risk exists at every transfer step: from personal name into the LLC, and potentially again if the lender’s attention is drawn to the offshore trust holding the LLC interest. Each property and each loan needs to be reviewed against the specific loan documents before any transfer is made.

Homestead Property: Usually Better Left Outside

Most states provide homestead exemptions that protect a primary residence — or a portion of its equity — from creditor claims. Florida’s homestead exemption is unlimited in value, covering the full equity in a primary residence. Texas offers a similar unlimited protection. Nevada, South Dakota, and several other states offer substantial but capped homestead exemptions.

These exemptions typically apply to property held in the owner’s individual name, or in some states in the name of a living trust structured in a specific way. Transferring homestead property into a domestic LLC and then having the LLC owned by a foreign trust can risk losing the homestead exemption entirely — the property would no longer be titled in the individual owner’s name in the way the state’s exemption statute requires. For most settlors in strong homestead states, the homestead exemption already provides the protection they need for their primary residence, and keeping that property outside the trust structure preserves the exemption rather than potentially forfeiting it.

When Equity Stripping Is the Better Solution

For investors with substantial equity built up inside properties — equity that is genuinely exposed to creditors even within a properly maintained LLC — the LLC-and-trust approach addresses who owns the LLC, but it doesn’t directly protect the equity sitting inside the property itself from a creditor who goes after the LLC directly.

Equity stripping addresses this from a different angle: rather than moving the property into an offshore ownership structure, it positions the equity inside the property through a secured loan arrangement, moving that equity into a protected offshore structure without the property itself changing title or going offshore at all. See our full guide to real estate equity stripping (REEIS) for how this works in detail alongside a Cook Islands Trust.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Not practically. Real property stays under US court jurisdiction regardless of who holds title, deeding to a foreign trust creates public record exposure, and it risks triggering due-on-sale clauses in mortgage agreements.

Deed the property into a domestic LLC, then transfer the LLC’s membership interest to the Cook Islands Trust. The property stays in the LLC; the trust holds the LLC. No deed is ever filed in the trust’s name.

It depends on the specific loan documents. Many mortgages give lenders the right to call the loan if ownership transfers without consent. Each property and loan needs to be reviewed before any transfer.

Usually no. Most states’ homestead exemptions require property to be titled in the individual’s name, and restructuring through an LLC and foreign trust can risk losing the exemption. Homestead protection may already be the right tool for a primary residence.

For significant equity exposure inside properties, equity stripping addresses it directly without moving the property title at all. A Cook Islands Trust holds liquid wealth outside the property; equity stripping repositions the equity inside it.

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