A client from Brooklyn recently sat in my office with a simple goal. She wanted to ensure her daughter would inherit the family brownstone, the house she herself grew up in. Her first thought was to add her daughter’s name to the deed. It seems easy—a quick trip to the county clerk’s office. I advised her to pause.
Adding a child’s name to your deed is one of the most common and costly mistakes I see in my practice. While done with good intentions, it immediately makes your home vulnerable to your daughter’s future financial life—a divorce, a lawsuit, or a bankruptcy. It also means you can no longer sell or refinance the property without her signature. You effectively give up control today to solve a problem that a trust could handle far more elegantly tomorrow.
Transferring a home is not just a transaction. It is an act of stewardship. The real question isn’t can you put your house in a trust for your daughter, but how and why you should do it with intention.
Deed vs. Trust: The Question of Control
The difference between adding a name to a deed and using a trust is control. When you create a joint tenancy by putting your daughter on the deed, you make her a co-owner of the property right now. The asset is exposed to her liabilities, and your full control is gone.
A trust operates differently. It creates a legal structure where property is held by a trustee—often, you are the initial trustee—for the benefit of a beneficiary, your daughter. You set the rules. You dictate the terms of the transfer. Control remains with you for as long as you decide, and the asset is shielded from the beneficiary’s personal financial entanglements until the time of inheritance.
This is a deliberate, planned transfer of a significant family asset. It replaces the blunt instrument of a deed transfer with a precise tool for managing your legacy.
Choosing the Right Instrument: Revocable vs. Irrevocable Trusts
In New York, not all trusts are the same. For transferring a home, families typically consider one of two paths.
The Revocable Living Trust
This is the most common tool for this goal. A revocable trust can be changed or dissolved by you, the grantor, at any time. You transfer the deed of your house into the trust’s name and name yourself as the trustee. You continue to live in the house, pay the bills, and manage the property exactly as you did before. Nothing changes in your daily life.
The primary benefit here is probate avoidance. Upon your passing, the successor trustee you named—perhaps your daughter or another trusted individual—can transfer the home to her directly. This avoids the cost, delay, and public record of Surrogate’s Court. Because you retain full control, however, a revocable trust offers no protection from your own creditors and does not assist with Medicaid planning.
The Irrevocable Trust
This is a more permanent instrument. When you place your home in an irrevocable trust, you are giving up ownership and control. You cannot easily undo it. Why would anyone do this? For two significant reasons: asset protection and long-term care planning.
An irrevocable trust can shield the home from creditors. Critically, it also starts the five-year look-back period for Medicaid eligibility. By transferring the asset out of your name, you are positioning your estate to preserve assets if you need long-term care down the road. It’s a serious step that requires careful consideration. When we draft the new deed to move the property into the trust, we must also comply with New York Real Property Law (RPL) § 240-c, which requires specific disclosures for such transfers.
The True Purpose: A Legacy of Intentional Stewardship
Avoiding probate is a practical benefit, but the deeper value of a trust is its ability to carry out your specific wishes. A trust is more than a legal document; it is a set of instructions for the future stewardship of your family’s assets.
What if your daughter is not yet financially mature? A trust can stipulate that the house cannot be sold until she reaches a certain age. What if she is in a difficult marriage? A well-drafted trust can help protect the property from being considered marital property in a divorce. You can name a co-trustee to help her manage the property, ensuring taxes and upkeep are handled prudently.
This is how a simple asset transfer becomes a generational plan. It anticipates contingencies and builds in protections that a simple deed can never offer. It ensures your gift provides the security you intend, rather than creating a new set of problems.
Deciding how to pass on a family home is a significant financial and emotional decision. The first step is to clarify your primary objective. Is it simply to avoid probate, or do you need to plan for potential long-term care costs and other liabilities? We begin this conversation with a detailed review of a family’s assets and goals to determine which path aligns with their vision for the future.





