I often meet with families who assume a simple will is enough. Consider a client I advised last year: a couple with a paid-off brownstone in Brooklyn, a thriving consulting business, and a valuable art collection. Their existing will would have pushed everything into the public, time-consuming, and often costly process of Surrogate’s Court. For them, a will was not a plan; it was a bottleneck. The conversation was not about avoiding paperwork—it was about uninterrupted stewardship of what they had spent a lifetime building. This is where a trust becomes an essential tool, not a luxury.
A trust creates a legal relationship where you, the grantor, transfer assets to a trustee. That trustee holds and manages them for the benefit of your chosen beneficiaries. But the word “trust” itself is too broad to be useful. In our practice, the first and most critical distinction we make is between two foundational structures: revocable and irrevocable.
The Foundational Choice: Revocable vs. Irrevocable
The decision between a revocable and an irrevocable trust hinges on one question: How much control are you willing to relinquish to achieve your goals?
A revocable living trust is the most common starting point. It is flexible. As the grantor, you typically name yourself as the trustee during your lifetime. You can amend it, add or remove assets, change beneficiaries, or even dissolve it entirely. Think of it as a container for your assets that you still fully control. Its primary purpose is organizational efficiency. Assets held in a revocable trust bypass probate, which saves your family significant time and money and keeps your affairs private. It also provides a clear plan for managing your finances if you become incapacitated, as your designated successor trustee can step in without court intervention.
An irrevocable trust is a far more permanent arrangement. Once you transfer assets into it, you generally cannot get them back or change the terms. You give up control. Why would anyone do this? For two powerful reasons: asset protection and tax mitigation. Because the assets are no longer legally yours, they are shielded from future creditors or lawsuits. For high-net-worth individuals, moving assets into an irrevocable trust can remove them from your taxable estate, significantly reducing or eliminating estate taxes for the next generation. This is not a casual decision—it is a deliberate act of generational wealth planning.
Trusts Designed for Specific Family Circumstances
Beyond the basic structures, we design trusts to address precise family needs. The structure of a trust must reflect the reality of a family’s life, their unique dynamics, and your vision for their future.
Parents of a child with special needs, for example, face a specific challenge. A direct inheritance could disqualify their child from essential government benefits like Medicaid and Supplemental Security Income (SSI). A Special Needs Trust (SNT), also called a supplemental needs trust, solves this. The trust holds the inheritance for the child’s benefit, but the assets are managed by a trustee who can pay for supplemental expenses—like therapy, education, or recreation—that government benefits do not cover. The inheritance enhances the child’s quality of life without jeopardizing their eligibility for care.
For clients concerned about estate tax exposure, an Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust (ILIT) is another common instrument. By transferring ownership of a life insurance policy to the trust, the death benefit is paid to the trust beneficiaries—typically your children or grandchildren—free from federal estate tax. For a substantial policy, this single step can preserve millions of dollars that would have otherwise gone to the IRS.
The Trustee: A Fiduciary, Not Just a Friend
Creating the trust document is only half the process. Choosing your trustee is just as critical. A trustee is a fiduciary—a legal term with significant weight. It means they have a duty to act solely in the best interests of the beneficiaries. This is not a promise; it is a legal obligation enforced by the courts.
In New York, a trustee’s conduct is governed by a high standard of care. Under the Prudent Investor Act, codified in EPTL § 11-2.3, a trustee must manage trust assets with the skill and caution that a prudent person would use. They are responsible for everything from making sound investment decisions to filing taxes and distributing funds according to the trust’s terms. Choosing a family member may seem natural, but you must ask if they have the financial acumen, impartiality, and time to fulfill this demanding role. Often, a corporate trustee or a private fiduciary is a more prudent choice to ensure professional management and avoid family conflict.
A trust is ultimately an instruction manual you leave for the people you love. It details how you want your assets managed and who you want to benefit from them long after you are gone. The structure you choose and the trustee you appoint will determine whether that manual is clear and effective or a source of future confusion.
A logical first step is to create a clear inventory of your major assets and write down your primary goals—is it probate avoidance, asset protection, tax reduction, or providing for a specific heir? With that document in hand, your next conversation should be with an attorney to determine which trust structure, if any, aligns with that vision. We regularly schedule initial planning sessions to help New York families make that determination.




