A client from Queens recently came into our Manhattan office with a common and pressing concern. Her mother had just passed away, and she was set to inherit around $80,000. While grateful, she was also worried. “Will this inheritance stop my monthly Social Security check?” she asked. It’s a question I hear often, and the answer—like so much in law—depends entirely on the specifics. The type of Social Security benefit you receive is the single most important factor.
For many New Yorkers, that monthly deposit is not just a supplement; it is a lifeline. The thought of losing it because of a family legacy is a source of real anxiety. For most people, an inheritance has no effect at all. But for a vulnerable few, it can change everything.
Earned Benefits vs. Needs-Based Assistance
The term “Social Security” is often used as a catch-all, but it covers several distinct programs. The two most common are Social Security Retirement (or Disability Insurance, SSDI) and Supplemental Security Income (SSI). Understanding which one you receive is the key.
Social Security Retirement/Disability (SSDI): This is an earned benefit. You and your employers paid into the system through FICA taxes during your working years. Think of it as an insurance program you funded over your career. Because you earned it, the Social Security Administration (SSA) does not impose an asset or resource limit. You can have millions in the bank and still collect your full retirement or disability check. A direct inheritance—cash, stock, or real estate—will not reduce or eliminate your Social Security retirement or SSDI payments.
Supplemental Security Income (SSI): This is a different animal altogether. SSI is a federal needs-based program for aged, blind, and disabled people with minimal income and resources. It is funded by general tax revenues, not by Social Security taxes. The SSA imposes strict financial limits. In 2024, an individual cannot have more than $2,000 in countable resources to qualify for SSI. For a couple, the limit is $3,000.
This is where an inheritance becomes a serious problem. A lump-sum inheritance is counted as income in the month it is received. If that amount is over the monthly SSI limit, you are ineligible for that month. Any money left over after that first month is then counted as a resource. An $80,000 inheritance would put a beneficiary far over the $2,000 resource limit, making them ineligible for SSI until those funds are spent down below the threshold.
The Hazard of Direct Inheritance for SSI Recipients
When a person on SSI receives a direct inheritance, they must report it to the SSA, typically within 10 days of the end of the month in which they received it. Failing to do so can result in penalties. Once reported, their SSI and the associated Medicaid benefits will almost certainly be suspended.
To regain eligibility, the beneficiary must “spend down” the inheritance. The funds must be used for their own needs on non-countable assets, such as paying off debt, making home repairs, purchasing a vehicle, or paying for medical care not covered by Medicaid. This can be a chaotic and inefficient way to manage a sudden windfall. It forces hasty financial decisions and offers no long-term stewardship for the funds that a loved one intended to be a source of security.
This is a difficult position for any family. The very gift meant to improve a loved one’s life ends up disrupting the essential stability that SSI and Medicaid provide. But this outcome is not inevitable—it is the result of a lack of planning.
A More Prudent Path: The Supplemental Needs Trust
For families with a loved one who relies on needs-based benefits like SSI or Medicaid, there is a far better instrument for providing for them. Instead of leaving assets directly to the individual, the inheritance can be directed into a Supplemental Needs Trust (SNT), sometimes called a Special Needs Trust.
An SNT is a specific type of trust designed to hold assets for the benefit of a person with disabilities without disqualifying them from their government assistance. The trust—not the individual—owns the assets. A person you select, the trustee, manages the funds and has discretion to make payments for things that enhance the beneficiary’s quality of life. This can include education, travel, hobbies, a wheelchair-accessible van, or services that government programs do not cover.
In New York, these trusts are codified in our laws. Specifically, New York Estates, Powers and Trusts Law § 7-1.12 provides the statutory framework that allows these trusts to work as intended, shielding the assets from being counted for Medicaid and SSI eligibility. By using an SNT, a parent or grandparent can leave a meaningful legacy that provides a lifetime of support without jeopardizing the foundational benefits their loved one depends on.
Stewardship. That is the goal. A well-drafted trust ensures that a legacy is managed prudently over the long term, providing security rather than creating a crisis.
If you are creating your own estate plan and one of your intended beneficiaries receives SSI or other needs-based government assistance, the structure of their inheritance is critical. The first step is to confirm exactly which benefits they receive. With that information, we can then determine if a Supplemental Needs Trust is the right vehicle to protect both your beneficiary and your legacy.




