An EOT holds a company's shares in trust for the benefit of employees, and the trust agreement is where mission protection actually lives. A well-drafted agreement can:
- State the mission, values, and purpose the company serves, and bar decisions that undermine it, such as a sale to an outside buyer or dilution that hands control to investors.
- Restrict or prohibit a future sale. With shares held by the trust rather than by individuals who can be bought out, there is no built-in pressure toward an exit.
- Create enforcement roles beyond the trustee. A trust protector (or enforcer) and a stewardship committee carry a legal obligation to see the company run in line with its stated purpose, and can be empowered to remove leaders who drift from it. The corporate trustee is usually "directed," handling administration with no substantive say. Few statutes spell these powers out, so the drafting carries the weight.
A well-drafted EOT can make the mission very hard to undo, far harder than an informal promise, but no structure is truly unbreakable. Where "permanent" gets complicated:
- State law matters. Some states allow a non-charitable purpose trust to last in perpetuity, but they differ on protection. One state created a dedicated stewardship trust that bars a court from reducing the trust's value; in several other perpetuity states a court retains power to reduce a purpose trust's corpus, which matters when the trust holds an entire business. Choosing the wrong state can quietly weaken your "forever."
- An escape hatch is usually intentional. No business lasts forever. Sound EOTs let an independent co-trustee or protector approve a sale or wind-down when closing the business is genuinely unavoidable. The protection guards against a casual or self-interested sale, not every possible future.
- Drafting and people decide the outcome. The lock is only as strong as the agreement's wording and the protector, committee, and trustees actually doing their jobs.
One clarification: if you have read that EOTs carry a large capital-gains tax break, that is the UK's rule, not the US. There is currently no comparable US selling-owner tax break for EOTs, so mission protection here comes from the trust structure, not from a tax incentive.
This is general education, not legal or tax advice. Mission-lock provisions, perpetuity, and protector powers are state-specific and fact-dependent, so confirm specifics with an attorney experienced in employee-ownership transitions and a CPA for the tax side.
If you have set up a US EOT or know your state's purpose-trust rules, please refine or correct anything here.