A client recently brought me her father’s will. She pointed to a section outlining a trust for her children and asked, “We’re all set, right? No court, no delays?” She was surprised by my answer. Because her father’s trust was written inside his will, it didn’t exist yet. It was a testamentary trust—an instruction to create a trust later. To activate it, the will and the entire estate would first have to pass through New York’s Surrogate’s Court.
This is the fundamental distinction I explain to families. The choice between a living trust and a testamentary trust is a choice about timing, privacy, and court involvement.
When Does the Trust Legally Exist?
The core difference is their moment of creation. A living trust—also known as an inter vivos trust—is a legal entity you create and fund while you are alive. I work with clients to draft the trust document, name a trustee, and retitle specific assets in the name of the trust. From that moment, the trust owns those assets. The trustee manages them according to the rules we established.
A testamentary trust, by contrast, is a ghost. It has no legal existence during your lifetime. It is merely a set of instructions embedded within your Last Will and Testament. The will directs the Executor, upon your death, to create and fund a trust. The trust does not spring into existence until a judge in Surrogate’s Court validates the will and authorizes its creation. Until then, it is only a contingency.
The Deciding Factor: The Probate Process
For most families I represent, avoiding probate is a primary goal. Probate is the court-supervised process of validating a will, paying debts, and distributing assets. In New York, this process is public, time-consuming, and can be costly.
A properly funded living trust bypasses this process entirely for the assets it holds. Because the trust already owns the assets and has a clear line of succession for the trustee, there is nothing for the court to administer. The successor trustee simply steps in and manages or distributes the assets according to the trust’s terms. It is a private, efficient transfer of stewardship.
A testamentary trust is inextricably linked to probate. The will containing the trust instructions must be admitted to probate under SCPA Article 14. This means the assets intended for the trust are part of the probate estate. They are subject to court oversight, potential delays, and the public filing of the will. While the trust provides long-term management for a beneficiary, it does nothing to shield the initial transfer from the probate process.
Choosing the Right Instrument for the Right Job
Why would anyone choose a testamentary trust? It’s not about one being “better” than the other; it’s about intentional design. A testamentary trust can be a prudent tool for a specific purpose, particularly for parents of young children. If a client’s primary concern is providing for a minor child should the unthinkable happen, a testamentary trust within a will can establish that protection without the upfront work of funding a living trust.
For clients focused on generational wealth transfer, business succession, or simply ensuring a seamless transition, the living trust is almost always the more effective instrument. It provides:
- Incapacity Planning: If you become unable to manage your affairs, your designated successor trustee can take over immediately, without needing a court to appoint a conservator.
- Privacy: The terms of your trust and the assets it holds remain private, shielded from the public record of the Surrogate’s Court in Manhattan or any other county.
- Control: It allows for a deliberate and orderly transfer of responsibility, managed outside the rigid timeline of the court system.
A living trust is an active instrument of stewardship you manage during your life. A testamentary trust is a posthumous instruction that depends entirely on the court system to be fulfilled. Understanding that difference is the first step toward building an effective legacy.
If your current estate plan relies on a will to create a trust for your heirs, it may be time to re-evaluate. You can book a confidential review of your existing documents with our firm to analyze whether your plan will trigger the court involvement you intended to avoid.





