Blake Harris

In the evolving landscape of wealth preservation, not all trusts are created equal.
As we look toward 2026, the gap between domestic and foreign asset protection strategies is widening into a chasm.

At Blake Harris Law, we conducted a 2026 analysis comparing the most common planning vehicles.
The results, summarized in the attached chart, highlight a critical reality: Jurisdiction is the ultimate determinant of security.

Here are the key takeaways from our 2026 Analysis:

1. The Domestic Weakness (DAPT)

Domestic Asset Protection Trusts (DAPTs) are failing to provide the necessary leverage. With a C+ Overall Score and, crucially, a “No” regarding whether the trustee will disregard U.S. court orders, DAPTs offer minimal deterrence against determined creditors. A “Fear Factor” score of D means litigants are not afraid to pursue these assets.

2. The Foreign Advantage (FAPT)

The Foreign Asset Protection Trust remains the gold standard, earning an A+ Overall Score. The critical differentiator is the first column: A foreign trustee is not bound by U.S. court orders. This creates the highest possible “Fear Factor” (A+), often stopping litigation before it even begins. It provides top-tier security without requiring late-stage maneuvering.

3. The Danger of Procrastination

The data regarding “No Planning” is stark. Straight F grades across the board. Furthermore, reliance on “Trigger Trusts” often requires “Late Stage Maneuvering,” introducing unnecessary risk when you need certainty the most.

Conclusion

The Verdict: If your goal is true peace of mind and leverage against frivolous lawsuits, offshore planning remains the best strategy.

Don’t settle for a “C+” defense of your “A+” portfolio.

Review the full analysis in the image below.

Blake Harris

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