The 5 and 5 Power: Flexibility in Trust Distribution

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When a Manhattan widow discovers that the $3 million trust her late husband established only pays out net income, the reality of rigid estate planning quickly sets in. A portfolio heavily weighted in growth stocks might yield less than $40,000 a year in dividends. If she needs additional funds to cover property taxes or in-home care, she must formally petition the trustee for a principal distribution. This creates instant friction—not only between the beneficiary and the trustee, but often between the surviving spouse and children from a prior marriage waiting to inherit the remainder, a conflict that frequently spills into Surrogate’s Court.

We design trusts to protect assets and preserve family wealth across generations. Stewardship. But stewardship should not mean financial suffocation for the primary beneficiary. A trust must breathe. It must adapt to changing financial realities without compromising the underlying tax strategy that justified its creation. We achieve this balance through a specific drafting mechanism: the 5 and 5 power.

The Limits of the Ascertainable Standard

In most irrevocable trusts, a beneficiary cannot hold unrestricted access to the underlying assets. If they did, the Internal Revenue Service would treat the entire trust corpus as belonging to the beneficiary, pulling those assets into their taxable estate and exposing the funds to their personal creditors.

Instead, we typically grant the trustee the discretion to distribute principal based on an ascertainable standard—specifically for the beneficiary’s health, education, maintenance, and support (HEMS). While the HEMS standard remains a cornerstone of prudent estate planning, it inherently places the beneficiary in a subservient position. They must ask the trustee for money, justify the request, and wait for approval. If the trustee is a corporate fiduciary, this process involves committees, paperwork, and delays. If the trustee is a family member, the power dynamic can permanently strain relationships.

A 5 and 5 power provides a structural release valve. It grants the beneficiary the absolute right to demand a specific amount of trust principal every year, no questions asked.

Mechanics of the 5 and 5 Safe Harbor

The name of this provision comes directly from a safe harbor in the federal tax code. Under IRC § 2041(b)(2), a trust document can grant a beneficiary the non-cumulative right to withdraw the greater of $5,000 or 5% of the fair market value of the trust assets each calendar year.

When a beneficiary exercises this right, the trustee must comply. The beneficiary does not need to prove a medical hardship or a financial need. They simply issue a written demand to the trustee, and the funds are distributed. This provides a baseline level of financial autonomy, guaranteeing a surviving spouse or adult child a source of liquidity regardless of the trust’s overall income yield.

The utility of the 5 and 5 power lies in its non-cumulative nature. It is a strict “use it or lose it” provision. If the beneficiary does not exercise their withdrawal right by December 31, the power lapses for that year. On January 1, a new power arises.

Under New York law, the structural classification of these withdrawal rights falls under EPTL § 10-3.2, which governs powers of appointment. A 5 and 5 power technically operates as a general power of appointment. However, because it is strictly limited by the statutory safe harbor, it avoids the catastrophic tax consequences usually associated with general powers. When the beneficiary allows the power to lapse at the end of the year, the IRS does not treat that lapse as a taxable gift to the remainder beneficiaries. The unwithdrawn funds simply remain inside the protective vault of the trust.

Strategic Asset Protection and Trustee Fiduciary Duty

From an asset protection standpoint, the 5 and 5 power requires deliberate planning. If a beneficiary faces a sudden lawsuit or a bankruptcy proceeding, creditors will naturally look to the trust for satisfaction. Because a 5 and 5 power gives the beneficiary the legal right to demand 5% of the principal, an aggressive creditor might succeed in attaching that specific year’s withdrawal right.

The exposure, however, is mathematically capped. A creditor cannot force the liquidation of the remaining 95% of the trust. Furthermore, once the calendar year expires, the unexercised right lapses, moving those funds permanently out of the creditor’s reach. While omitting the power entirely provides the highest level of creditor protection, including it strikes a prudent balance between shielding assets and maintaining the beneficiary’s quality of life.

For the individual or institution serving as trustee, a 5 and 5 provision requires proactive portfolio management. Because the beneficiary holds the absolute right to demand 5% of the corpus annually, the trustee must maintain sufficient liquidity to honor that request. They cannot lock all trust assets into highly illiquid real estate or long-term private equity vehicles. The investment strategy must account for this potential annual outflow, ensuring a sudden demand for cash does not force the fire sale of core family assets.

Applying the Power to Life Insurance Trusts

Beyond standard marital or generation-skipping trusts, we frequently utilize the 5 and 5 limitation when drafting Irrevocable Life Insurance Trusts (ILITs). When a grantor transfers cash into an ILIT to pay the annual insurance premiums, those transfers are subject to gift tax. To qualify the transfers for the annual gift tax exclusion, we grant the trust beneficiaries a temporary right to withdraw the newly contributed funds—a mechanism known as a Crummey power.

If the beneficiaries do not withdraw the funds within the specified window—typically 30 to 60 days—the power lapses, and the trustee uses the cash to pay the premium. By capping these Crummey withdrawal rights at the 5 and 5 safe harbor limits, we prevent the lapse of the power from inadvertently creating a taxable gift from the beneficiary back to the trust.

Securing Intentional Outcomes

Estate planning is fundamentally about control, but control should never become a trap for the people you intend to protect. A rigidly drafted document that ignores the daily financial realities of its beneficiaries is a failed plan. Incorporating a 5 and 5 power requires a deliberate analysis of the family dynamic, the size of the anticipated trust corpus, and the financial maturity of the beneficiaries.

If you are relying on an older estate plan or currently serve as the custodian of family wealth, you must know exactly how your trust distribution provisions operate under current New York law. Request a formal review of your existing irrevocable trust documents with our office to determine if your current structure provides adequate flexibility for your beneficiaries without compromising your generational tax strategy.

DISCLAIMER: The information provided in this blog is for informational purposes only and should not be considered legal advice. The content of this blog may not reflect the most current legal developments. No attorney-client relationship is formed by reading this blog or contacting Morgan Legal Group PLLP.

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