I recently sat with a client in our Manhattan office who had spent months organizing every financial detail of her life. She knew exactly which assets she wanted to place in a trust for her children. Yet, the documents remained unsigned. When I asked what the roadblock was, her answer was one I’ve heard for decades: “Russel, who can I possibly trust to manage all of this when I’m gone?”
This is the question that stalls more estate plans than any other. The mechanics of drafting a trust are straightforward for an experienced attorney. The real work—the human work—is in the selection of a trustee. This isn’t about filling in a blank line on a form. It’s about appointing a custodian for your life’s work and a guardian of your family’s future.
Stewardship.
That is the heart of the matter. You are not bestowing an honor; you are assigning a difficult, often thankless, and legally demanding job.
Your Trustee’s Role: A Job, Not an Honor
When you name someone as a trustee, you give them legal title to the assets in the trust. They have the authority to manage, invest, and distribute those assets according to the instructions you leave in the trust document. For your beneficiaries—perhaps your children or a family member with special needs—the trustee becomes the gatekeeper and manager of their financial well-being.
It’s a role that requires a unique blend of financial acumen, personal integrity, and emotional fortitude. A trustee must be able to communicate clearly with beneficiaries, make prudent investment decisions, keep meticulous records, file tax returns, and, at times, say “no.” That last part is often the hardest. A beneficiary might want a distribution for a questionable business venture, and it will be the trustee’s job to deny the request if it runs counter to your intentions or the trust’s purpose of long-term preservation.
Choosing the oldest child or a close friend out of a sense of obligation is rarely the right path. The question isn’t “who will feel honored?” but “who is most capable of executing these specific duties?”
The Legal Weight: Fiduciary Duty in New York
The decision of whom to trust is personal, but the consequences of that choice are governed by law. In New York, a trustee is a fiduciary. This is one of the highest standards of care recognized in our legal system. It means the trustee has a legal obligation to act solely in the best interests of the beneficiaries.
This isn’t just a moral suggestion—it is a binding, enforceable mandate. The New York Estates, Powers and Trusts Law (EPTL) outlines these responsibilities. For example, EPTL § 11-1.7 expressly forbids a trustee from exonerating themselves from liability for failing to exercise reasonable care and prudence. The law holds your chosen steward to an objective standard. They cannot put their own interests first, they cannot be reckless with trust assets, and they must treat all beneficiaries impartially.
This legal backstop means you are not relying on goodwill alone. You are appointing someone to a position with significant legal accountability, overseen by the Surrogate’s Court. Your trust is reinforced by the full weight of state law.
Qualities of a Prudent Trustee
Over the years, I’ve seen what separates an effective trustee from one who creates conflict and depletes assets. Effective trustees share a few key traits, which have little to do with their personal wealth or their relationship to you.
A prudent trustee is:
- Organized and Diligent. Can this person manage their own finances well? Are they responsive, detail-oriented, and reliable? Administering a trust involves deadlines, paperwork, and careful record-keeping. A disorganized person, no matter how well-intentioned, will struggle.
- Emotionally Resolute. A trustee must navigate complex family dynamics without taking sides. They must be able to make impartial decisions, even if it means disappointing a beneficiary in the short term to protect the trust’s long-term purpose.
- Willing to Seek Counsel. The most effective trustees know what they don’t know. They are not afraid to hire professionals—accountants, financial advisors, and attorneys—to assist them. A trustee who tries to do everything themselves is often a risk.
In some cases, especially with significant or complex assets, the right choice may not be a person at all. A corporate trustee, such as a bank’s trust department, can offer impartiality, expertise, and continuity that an individual cannot. While they charge a fee, they also remove the emotional burden from a family member and ensure professional management for generations.
Choosing a trustee is a deliberate and intentional act of legacy planning. It may be the single most important decision you make in the entire process.
If you are considering creating a trust and are uncertain about this critical choice, I suggest a preparatory exercise. Before we speak, create a simple, two-column list. On one side, list every potential individual or institution you might name as trustee. On the other, write the single biggest reservation you have about each one. This act of clarification is often the first step toward making a confident decision.

