Anti-alienation clause

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The Law of Wills, Trusts
and Estate Administration
Part of the common law series
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Disclaimer of interest
Other related topics
Living Wills (advance directives)
Totten trust
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An Anti-alienation clause is a provision in the governing document for an arrangement such as a trust that specifies that the beneficial or equitable owner of the property held in that arrangement cannot transfer his or her interest to a third party. This rule is an exception to the general rule in property law that favors free alienability.

The exception is recognized to benefit minors, incompetents, and trust beneficiaries that may otherwise behave as a spendthrift would.

A spendthrift trust is an example of an arrangement containing an anti-alienation provision. The governing document of such a trust provides that the trust corpus may not be reached by creditors while the property is held in the trust. Creditors aware of this legal restriction on alienation may choose not to lend to the spendthrift.

[edit] Applied to pensions

Some ERISA retirement plans contain anti-alienation provisions requiring that the trusts to which the plans relate be for the exclusive purpose of benefitting plan participants.