You might think a pot trust would be a trust designed to hold your maui wowie  and/or Bob Marley memorabilia. But in fact, this type of trust is designed to  promote fairness in families with a big age gap between children. 
In many cases, a husband and wife will divide their property equally between  their children at the death of the second spouse to die. That can be fair, but  what if one child is 25 years old (and has completed college) while the other  child is 14 (and has yet to begin college)? Given the high cost of higher  education, "equality" could be unfair in this situation. For instance, if we  assume husband and wife had a combined estate of $400,000, then each child would  receive $200,000. The younger child's inheritance may be consumed (largely or  even entirely) by tuition and room and board, while the older child can use the  $200,000 as he or she sees fit.
Enter the pot trust. Instead of dividing property equally at the death of the  second spouse to die, the property is held in trust until the younger child  reaches a certain age (for instance, 25) or graduates from college. Up until  that time, money can come out of the pot trust for either child, but the main  purpose of the pot trust -- expressed specifically in the trust document -- is  for the payment of the younger child's education expenses.
Once the termination date is reached (say, younger child reaches 25), the pot  trust terminates and the remaining property is then divided equally among the  children. Let's say that the $400,000 combined estate referenced above drops to  $240,000 while the pot trust is ongoing, because the younger child's college  education cost $160,000. Upon the termination date, each child receives  $120,000. A much fairer result, I think.
Source: Joel A. Schoenmeyer http://www.deathandtaxesblog.com/2011/09/what_is_a_pot_trust.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+DeathAndTaxesBlogCom+%28Death+and+Taxes+Blog%29
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