EPISODE · May 9, 2026 · 1 MIN
Episode 128: The Fraudulent Transfer Lookback – Timing Your Asset Protection
from Family Office Daily · host M.C. Laubscher
In Episode 128 of Family Office Daily, M.C. Laubscher reveals the most critical factor in asset protection that most business owners overlook: timing. Asset protection only works if you implement it before you need it – and understanding fraudulent transfer lookback periods is essential. This episode explains why transferring assets after a lawsuit is filed or threatened will result in courts voiding the transfer as a "fraudulent conveyance." Every state has lookback periods during which creditors can challenge asset transfers, ranging from four to ten years depending on the jurisdiction. M.C. breaks down the federal bankruptcy lookback periods: two years for actual fraud (intentional transfers to defraud creditors) and one year for constructive fraud (transfers while insolvent or for inadequate consideration). State laws add additional layers of complexity with varying lookback periods. You'll discover why asset protection must be proactive, not reactive. If you transfer assets to your LLC or trust today and a lawsuit happens tomorrow, the court will likely reverse the transfer. But if you established your structure five years ago and a lawsuit happens today, the transfer stands and your assets are protected. The fundamental principle: Build your fortress when the skies are clear, not when the storm hits. Waiting until you're sued means it's already too late.Key Insight: The lookback clock starts the moment you transfer assets. Implement your asset protection structure now, while you're solvent and there are no claims against you.Key Takeaways:Asset protection only works if implemented before claims arise – Timing is everythingFraudulent transfer lookback periods vary – Federal: 1-2 years, State: 4-6 yearsTransfers after lawsuit filed will be voided – Courts reverse fraudulent conveyancesMust be solvent at time of transfer – Insolvency = constructive fraudMust receive adequate consideration – Gifts or nominal amounts are fraudulent if insolventBadges of fraud indicate intent – Multiple red flags = fraudulent transferIdeal timing: 5+ years before any claim – Exceeds all lookback periodsProactive planning is legal, reactive is not – Build fortress before storm hits📚 FREE RESOURCES:Books: The Business Owner's Family Office & Get Wealthy for Sure📹 Free video: How to Create Your Own Family Office in 90 Days📞 Book a call with our team👉 www.producerswealth.com/familyKeywords:fraudulent transfer lookback period, fraudulent conveyance, asset protection timing, when to implement asset protection, fraudulent transfer laws, bankruptcy lookback period, state fraudulent transfer laws, badges of fraud, solvency requirement asset protection, adequate consideration transfer, proactive asset protection, reactive asset protection illegal, fraudulent transfer void, creditor challenge transferHashtags:#FraudulentConveyance #AssetProtectionTiming #BadgesOfFraud #Solvency #AdequateConsideration #BankruptcyLaw #CreditorProtection #LegalCompliance #ProactiveProtection #ReactiveProtection #AssetTransfer #BusinessProtection #WealthProtection #LegalPlanning #TimingMatters
What this episode covers
In Episode 128 of Family Office Daily, M.C. Laubscher reveals the most critical factor in asset protection that most business owners overlook: timing. Asset protection only works if you implement it before you need it – and understanding fraudulent transfer lookback periods is essential. This episode explains why transferring assets after a lawsuit is filed or threatened will result in courts voiding the transfer as a "fraudulent conveyance." Every state has lookback periods during which creditors can challenge asset transfers, ranging from four to ten years depending on the jurisdiction. M.C. breaks down the federal bankruptcy lookback periods: two years for actual fraud (intentional transfers to defraud creditors) and one year for constructive fraud (transfers while insolvent or for inadequate consideration). State laws add additional layers of complexity with varying lookback periods. You'll discover why asset protection must be proactive, not reactive. If you transfer assets to your LLC or trust today and a lawsuit happens tomorrow, the court will likely reverse the transfer. But if you established your structure five years ago and a lawsuit happens today, the transfer stands and your assets are protected. The fundamental principle: Build your fortress when the skies are clear, not when the storm hits. Waiting until you're sued means it's already too late.Key Insight: The lookback clock starts the moment you transfer assets. Implement your asset protection structure now, while you're solvent and there are no claims against you.Key Takeaways:Asset protection only works if implemented before claims arise – Timing is everythingFraudulent transfer lookback periods vary – Federal: 1-2 years, State: 4-6 yearsTransfers after lawsuit filed will be voided – Courts reverse fraudulent conveyancesMust be solvent at time of transfer – Insolvency = constructive fraudMust receive adequate consideration – Gifts or nominal amounts are fraudulent if insolventBadges of fraud indicate intent – Multiple red flags = fraudulent transferIdeal timing: 5+ years before any claim – Exceeds all lookback periodsProactive planning is legal, reactive is not – Build fortress before storm hits📚 FREE RESOURCES:Books: The Business Owner's Family Office & Get Wealthy for Sure📹 Free video: How to Create Your Own Family Office in 90 Days📞 Book a call with our team👉 www.producerswealth.com/familyKeywords:fraudulent transfer lookback period, fraudulent conveyance, asset protection timing, when to implement asset protection, fraudulent transfer laws, bankruptcy lookback period, state fraudulent transfer laws, badges of fraud, solvency requirement asset protection, adequate consideration transfer, proactive asset protection, reactive asset protection illegal, fraudulent transfer void, creditor challenge transferHashtags:#FraudulentConveyance #AssetProtectionTiming #BadgesOfFraud #Solvency #AdequateConsideration #BankruptcyLaw #CreditorProtection #LegalCompliance #ProactiveProtection #ReactiveProtection #AssetTransfer #BusinessProtection #WealthProtection #LegalPlanning #TimingMatters
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Episode 128: The Fraudulent Transfer Lookback – Timing Your Asset Protection
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