Reduce public exposure with privacy-forward ownership
People with public visibility use privacy trusts to separate identity from asset ownership.
Cards and statements can show the trust name, not a personal name, where product rules allow.
Property records can show trust ownership instead of a direct personal trail.
Content creators with significant online followings
Executives and public figures seeking privacy
Anyone who has experienced or fears doxxing
High-net-worth individuals wanting reduced public exposure
Professionals in sensitive fields (judges, prosecutors, journalists)
Your name may not appear on certain records the way personal ownership does—reducing easy public linkage.
Harder for bad actors to trace assets through a short path of public records alone.
Business-facing accounts can present a trust identity instead of a personal one where supported.
Sofia had to move after her address surfaced from property records. After a privacy trust, her new home sat in a trust name that did not tie cleanly to her public persona. Banking and property pointed at the trust layer—while she stayed fully compliant with KYC.
Rule-based trusts for protection, privacy, and legacy. Built for modern life.
Product
Overrule does not provide legal, tax, or financial advice. Trust services involve complex legal and financial considerations. Availability varies by jurisdiction. Not FDIC insured through Overrule directly — deposits held at partner banks may be FDIC insured up to applicable limits.
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