RevocablePrivacyDomestic

Privacy Shield

Reduce public exposure with privacy-forward ownership

Why People Use It

Creators, executives, and anyone with public visibility use privacy trusts to separate their identity from asset ownership. Your debit card shows the trust name, not your personal name. Property records show the trust, not you.

Who This Is For

  • 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)

Key Benefits

Identity Separation

Your name doesn't appear on property records, vehicle registrations, or financial statements that could be accessed publicly.

Doxxing Protection

Makes it significantly harder for bad actors to trace assets back to you through public records searches.

Professional Privacy

Debit cards and accounts show the trust name, so merchants and payment processors don't see your personal identity.

Stalker Prevention

Reduces the paper trail that stalkers, harassers, or obsessive fans can follow to find your address or assets.

Real World Scenario

Sofia's Experience

The Situation

Sofia, a content creator with 2 million followers, started receiving threatening messages after a controversial video. Someone found her home address through public property records and posted it online. She had to move and hire security.

The Outcome

After establishing a privacy trust, Sofia's new home is owned by 'Studio VLT Trust'—a name that doesn't connect to her online identity. Her car, bank accounts, and credit cards all show the trust name. She can still operate normally, but her personal identity is no longer exposed in public records.

Core Conditions

  • Assets titled in trust name, not personal name
  • Debit cards display trust name
  • Property records show trust ownership
  • Payment trails don't connect to personal identity

You decide the conditions, verification methods, and level of control.

How It Works

1

Create Your Trust Identity

Choose a trust name that doesn't reveal your personal identity.

2

Transfer Visible Assets

Move property, vehicles, and financial accounts to trust ownership.

3

Get Trust Banking

Receive debit cards and accounts in the trust name.

4

Operate Privately

Conduct transactions without exposing personal identity.

Why a Trust?

AlternativeLimitationTrust Advantage
Using an LLCLLC ownership is often public record; requires annual filingsTrust beneficiaries are not public record in most states
Data Broker Opt-OutsEndless whack-a-mole; data reappears constantlyPrevents data from being created in the first place
Using a Friend's NameLegally risky; creates liability and tax issuesLegitimate legal structure with proper ownership

Common Questions

Have More Questions?

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Join the waitlist to be first in line when we launch.

Not legal advice. Subject to KYC/AML. Availability varies by jurisdiction.

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