A client came to me last year, a successful entrepreneur with a growing business in Manhattan. His will was in order, but he was worried. One bad contract, one future lawsuit, and the wealth he’d built for his family could be exposed. A will offers precisely zero protection against the claims of creditors—either during your lifetime or after your death. This is a common and dangerous misunderstanding, and it’s where the conversation about a trust begins.
A will is a set of instructions for the Surrogate’s Court. Upon your death, it becomes a public document. Every asset, every beneficiary, every detail becomes part of the public record. A trust is different. It’s a private contract between you (the grantor), a person or institution you appoint to manage the assets (the trustee), and your chosen heirs (the beneficiaries). It does not pass through the courts. It does not become public knowledge.
A Private Contract for Your Legacy
When people think of estate planning, they almost always think of a will. In my practice, I often frame the will as a backstop, not the main event. The real work of generational stewardship happens within a trust. Why? Because a trust bypasses probate.
Probate is the court-supervised process of validating a will, paying off debts, and distributing assets. It is slow, expensive, and public. For families in New York, it can mean months—sometimes years—of frozen assets and legal proceedings. By placing assets like real estate, investment accounts, or business interests into a trust, you remove them from your probate estate. When you pass away, your successor trustee simply takes over and administers the assets according to the private instructions you left. No court proceeding, no public filing, and no lengthy delay.
This privacy is not just about avoiding nosy neighbors. It protects your family from predatory interests who scrutinize public probate filings, looking for vulnerable heirs. Stewardship.
Building a Wall Around Your Assets
Beyond privacy, a trust is one of the most effective instruments we have for asset protection. This is accomplished primarily through an irrevocable trust. The name sounds final, and it is a significant step, but the protection it affords is powerful.
When you transfer an asset into an irrevocable trust, you legally relinquish direct ownership. The asset no longer belongs to you; it belongs to the trust. You appoint a trustee—a trusted family member, an attorney, or a corporate trustee—who has a strict fiduciary duty to manage the assets for the benefit of your beneficiaries. Because you no longer own the asset, it is generally shielded from future personal liabilities, creditors, or judgments against you. It creates a legal wall between your personal risk and your family’s inheritance.
This is not a tool for evading existing debts. Courts will look at transfers intended to defraud current creditors. Instead, it is a prudent, forward-looking strategy for people who want to insulate their legacy from unforeseen future events—the very thing that worried my entrepreneurial client.
The Right Structure for Your Goals
Not every trust needs to be irrevocable. A revocable living trust offers no creditor protection but is an excellent tool for avoiding probate and managing your affairs if you become incapacitated. You maintain full control, can amend it anytime, and can serve as your own trustee. It’s about seamless management, not a liability shield.
The choice between revocable and irrevocable is a deliberate one, based entirely on your goals. Even the term “irrevocable” has nuance in our state. Under New York’s Estates, Powers and Trusts Law (EPTL) § 7-1.9, it is sometimes possible to modify or even revoke an irrevocable trust, but only with the written consent of all beneficiaries. This provides a potential escape hatch for changed circumstances, but it requires cooperation from everyone involved.
A trust can also be designed for highly specific purposes. For a family with a disabled child, a Special Needs Trust can hold assets for the child’s benefit without disqualifying them from essential government aid like Medicaid or SSI. For others, a trust can protect an inheritance from a beneficiary’s divorce or financial mismanagement. It is an intentional act of planning for life’s contingencies.
The correct structure depends on what you are trying to protect and for whom. An inventory of your assets and a clear statement of your intentions is the necessary first step. If you’re ready to have that foundational conversation, I invite you to schedule a private call with our firm to review your asset structure and family goals.


