North Carolina trustee bonds.
Faithful performance, backed.

When a court requires a trustee to be bonded, this is the bond.
It guarantees the trustee’s faithful performance of their duties to the beneficiaries.
The court sets the amount in reference to the value of the trust property.
It is underwritten, not flat-rated — tell us the trust and the role, and we quote it.

Required when a court orders it under the NC Uniform Trust Code, N.C. Gen. Stat. § 36C-7-702
Secures the trustee’s faithful performance of fiduciary duties to the beneficiaries
Amount is set by the court — underwritten on credit and the trust, financials may apply
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Trusted by industry leaders
NYCEDC
BDG
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NYCEDC
BDG
Capital
McKinney
Terra
JLL
Triple Five
Georgetown
How it works

Built for the order requiring bond.

A trustee usually only needs this when the trust instrument or the court requires it. Here is the whole process:

TODAY · 10 MINUTES

Tell us the trust & the role

Send the court (or the trust instrument’s requirement), your role as trustee, and the value of the trust property. That value drives the amount and the quote.

ABOUT 1 BUSINESS DAY

A specialist underwrites & quotes

A surety specialist reviews the matter, including a soft credit check, and returns a quote. Most trustee bonds clear on credit; larger trusts may require financial statements, which we flag up front.

ON APPROVAL

Execute & file

We issue the bond on the form the court accepts, with the surety’s power of attorney attached, so it can be filed with the clerk and you can administer the trust.

About this bond

What it is and who needs it.

When a trustee has to be bonded

A trustee holds and manages property for the benefit of others, under a duty of loyalty and prudence. Many trusts waive bond — but a court can still require one, especially in litigation or to protect beneficiaries who can’t protect themselves.

The trustee bond secures the trustee’s faithful performance: investing prudently, accounting honestly, and distributing the trust as its terms and the law require. If the trustee breaches that duty, the bond answers to the beneficiaries.

Under the NC Uniform Trust Code a trustee gives bond only if the court finds it needed to protect the beneficiaries’ interests. When required, § 36C-7-702 sizes a corporate-surety bond at not less than one and one-fourth times the value of the trust’s personal property (or, over $100,000, value plus ten percent), versus double for a personal surety — and banks and licensed trust companies need not give bond. We size and underwrite to the order.

North Carolina StatuteN.C. Gen. Stat. § 36C-7-702 (NC Uniform Trust Code) governs the trustee’s bond. A trustee is not required to give bond unless the court finds it needed to protect the interests of beneficiaries; when required, a corporate-surety bond is not less than one and one-fourth times the value of the personal property to come into the trustee’s hands — or, where that value exceeds $100,000, value plus ten percent — versus double the value for a personal surety. Banks and trust companies licensed to do trust business in the State need not give bond. All bonds are filed with the clerk of superior court.

You need this bond if you’re

A trustee the court has ordered to post a bond before or during administration of a trust
A successor trustee stepping in where the trust instrument or the court requires bonding
A family or individual trustee administering a trust whose terms call for security
Counsel who needs the trustee bonded to satisfy the court or the instrument

Start with your role and the trust value.

These are the actual underwriting fields — your trustee role, the court, the trust, and your business. Submit once and a surety specialist responds in about one business day with a quote and any financial requirement. No charge until the bond is issued.

Start the application →
FAQs

Common questions.

If yours isn't here, the bond team can usually answer within the hour.

What is a North Carolina trustee bond? +
It is a faithful-performance bond a trustee posts when the court or the trust instrument requires it, under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 36C-7-702 of the NC Uniform Trust Code. It secures the trustee’s duties to the beneficiaries — prudent management, honest accounting, and proper distribution.
Does a trustee always need a bond? +
No. Under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 36C-7-702 a trustee is not required to give bond unless the court finds it needed to protect the interests of beneficiaries, and banks and licensed trust companies are exempt. When the court does require it, this is the bond.
Who sets the amount? +
The court. For a corporate-surety bond, § 36C-7-702 sets it at not less than one and one-fourth times the value of the trust’s personal property — or, over $100,000, value plus ten percent. We size and underwrite the bond to whatever the court orders.
How much does it cost? +
There is no flat rate. The bond is underwritten individually: premium depends on the court-set penal sum, the underwriting, and the trust. Most trustee bonds clear on a soft credit check; larger trusts may require financials. Tell us your role and the trust value and a specialist returns a quote.
How fast can I get it? +
A specialist typically responds within one business day of a complete submission, and we issue promptly on approval so the bond can be filed with the clerk and you can administer the trust.
Related bonds

Other New York bonds.

Get bonded so you can serve as trustee.

Send your role and the trust value. A surety specialist underwrites it and returns a quote — typically within one business day. No charge until the bond is issued.

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