A client once came to my office deeply conflicted. His father had named him trustee of the family trust, a significant responsibility involving a Manhattan apartment, an investment portfolio, and a business interest. He was honored, but he was also spending nearly ten hours a week on administration—paying bills, communicating with beneficiaries, and working with accountants. He asked me a simple question: “Am I supposed to do this for free?”
The answer is no. A trustee’s work is critical, and New York law provides for compensation. How that fee is calculated, however, is a source of frequent confusion and family disputes. The role of a trustee is not merely administrative; it is a profound act of stewardship. Understanding the compensation framework is essential for the person serving and the beneficiaries they serve.
The Default Rule: New York’s Statutory Commissions
When a trust document is silent on compensation, New York law provides the answer. Surrogate’s Court Procedure Act (SCPA) § 2309 establishes a clear, tiered formula for annual commissions. While the statute specifically governs trusts created by a will, courts accept it as the standard for calculating reasonable fees for living trusts as well.
The annual commissions are based on the principal value of the trust assets:
- 1.0% on the first $400,000 of principal
- 0.45% on the next $600,000 of principal
- 0.3% on all principal above $1,000,000
For a trust with a principal of $2,000,000, the annual commission is $9,700. This is calculated as $4,000 (on the first $400k), plus $2,700 (on the next $600k), plus $3,000 (on the remaining $1M). The law also provides for an additional 1% commission on all principal paid out of the trust.
This statutory formula provides a predictable, defensible framework. It prevents a trustee from arbitrarily setting a fee and gives beneficiaries a clear understanding of administrative costs. Stewardship.
Corporate Trustees vs. Individual Trustees
The choice of trustee directly impacts the fee structure. While SCPA § 2309 provides a baseline, the reality differs when a corporate trustee is involved.
A corporate trustee—a bank or trust company—operates from its own published fee schedule, which is usually referenced in the trust document. These fees are often higher than the statutory commissions, justified by the institution’s expertise and professional liability coverage. When we advise clients on naming a corporate trustee, we review these fee schedules to ensure they are appropriate for the estate.
An individual trustee—a family member or friend—has more flexibility. They can accept the full statutory commission, take a reduced fee, or waive compensation entirely. For my client managing his father’s trust, taking the statutory commission was the right choice. It fairly compensated him for his work without burdening the trust. In other families, a trustee might waive the fee as an act of love, though I always counsel them to consider the real work involved before making that commitment.
The Importance of a Deliberate Fee Clause
Relying on the statutory default is a valid approach, but a deliberately drafted trust is always better. An effective estate plan should explicitly address trustee compensation to remove ambiguity and prevent conflict.
The person creating the trust—the grantor—can specify a different structure. They might set a flat annual fee, an hourly rate, or a percentage lower than the statute provides. This is useful in unique situations, like a trust holding a single illiquid asset where a commission based on principal value makes little sense.
Defining compensation in the trust instrument is a final act of stewardship from the grantor. It provides clarity for the trustee and manages the expectations of the beneficiaries. It shows the grantor considered not just the assets, but the people charged with managing them. This is one of the most effective ways to prevent a dispute from ever reaching the Surrogate’s Court.
A trustee’s fee is not just a payment. It is an acknowledgment of their fiduciary duty and the gravity of their role. Calculating it correctly is a matter of law, fairness, and preserving family harmony.
If you are serving as a trustee or creating a trust, a clear understanding of these rules is vital. We can review the compensation provisions in your existing or proposed trust documents to ensure they align with your intentions and New York law.





