Pet Trusts in California: Making Sure Your Animal Is Cared For If Something Happens to You

Michael Benavides • June 19, 2026

You can't leave money directly to your dog — but California law lets you create an enforceable trust that funds your pet's care for the rest of its life, with someone legally bound to follow your instructions.

QIM Score: 82/100 — published under the house rule: no post goes live unscored. Routes: AnimalsXYZ · Animal Law.

Yes, California Recognizes Pet Trusts

Under Probate Code § 15212, California allows a trust for the care of an animal alive during your lifetime. It's a real, enforceable legal arrangement — not just a wish in a will — which means the person you name actually has to use the funds for your pet's care or answer to the court.

What a Good Pet Trust Covers

A well-drafted pet trust names a caregiver and a separate trustee to manage the money, sets aside reasonable funds for food, vet care, grooming, and emergencies, spells out your pet's routine and preferences, and says what happens to any leftover funds. It can cover one animal or several, including pets you may have in the future.

Why a Will Often Isn't Enough

A will can name a caregiver, but it can't easily enforce ongoing care or release money over time, and it only takes effect after probate — too slow for a living animal that needs care the same day. A trust bridges that gap.

What to Do

If your pet would be left in limbo without you, a pet trust fixes that with the force of law. A free consult walks you through setting one up that fits your animal and your estate.

AnimalsXYZ — Michael Benavides Legal — free consult | Michael Benavides, Esq., CA Bar No. 270714 | 707-362-4166 | attorneymichaelbenavides.com

ATTORNEY ADVERTISING. AnimalsXYZ — Michael Benavides Legal is a trade name of the law practice of Michael Benavides, Esq., California State Bar No. 270714. General information only — not legal advice, and no attorney-client relationship is formed by reading this. Animal-law outcomes depend on your specific facts. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome; verify current deadlines and figures.

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