I once sat with a client, a successful entrepreneur from Long Island, who was drafting his will. His concern wasn’t for himself, but for his son. The young man was brilliant and kind, but financially impulsive and involved in a business with significant personal liability risks. The father’s question was direct: “How do I leave him everything I’ve built without him losing it all in a year?”
This is a common dilemma. You work a lifetime to build a legacy, but you recognize that a beneficiary may not be equipped—either due to age, inexperience, or personal struggles—to manage a sudden inheritance. The fear is that the funds will be squandered or seized by creditors. This is the exact situation where a spendthrift trust becomes an instrument of prudent stewardship.
A Shield for Inheritance, Not a Punishment
A spendthrift trust is a protective vehicle. It separates the beneficiary from direct control over the trust assets. Instead of handing over a lump sum, you appoint a trustee—a person or institution—to manage and distribute the funds according to the instructions you lay out in the trust document. The beneficiary cannot demand a full payout, nor can they pledge their future inheritance to a creditor as collateral for a loan.
The core of this protection is a “spendthrift provision.” This clause expressly forbids the beneficiary from voluntarily or involuntarily transferring their interest in the trust. Consequently, if a creditor wins a lawsuit against the beneficiary, they generally cannot force the trustee to hand over trust assets to satisfy the judgment. The assets are shielded because they do not legally belong to the beneficiary until the trustee makes a distribution.
This isn’t about controlling a loved one from beyond the grave. It’s about creating a structure that provides for them consistently, protecting the inheritance from being lost to a single poor decision, a lawsuit, or a divorce.
The Trustee’s Fiduciary Duty
Appointing a trustee is the most critical decision in this process. This individual or corporate entity becomes the legal owner of the trust assets and is bound by a strict fiduciary duty to act in the best interest of the beneficiary. Their role is not to arbitrarily withhold funds but to manage them prudently and make distributions that align with your stated purpose—whether that’s for education, health, maintenance, or general support.
The trust document provides the trustee with a roadmap. It can be drafted to give the trustee broad discretion (“for the beneficiary’s general welfare”) or narrow instructions (distributions only for specific educational or medical expenses). The power rests in your hands when you create the trust. The trustee’s job is to execute your plan with loyalty and care. Choosing the right trustee—someone who is responsible, financially savvy, and understands your family dynamics—is paramount to the trust’s success.
How New York Law Views Spendthrift Trusts
New York has a strong public policy in favor of protecting trust beneficiaries. Our state law is unique because it automatically provides spendthrift protection for trust income. Under New York’s Estates, Powers and Trusts Law (EPTL) § 7-1.5, nearly all trusts that pay income to a beneficiary are considered spendthrift trusts by default, even if the document doesn’t explicitly say so.
This statutory protection is significant, but it is not absolute. The law recognizes certain exceptions. For instance, creditors can reach trust income that exceeds what is necessary for the beneficiary’s education and support. Claims for child support, alimony, and certain government obligations can also attach to trust assets. It’s a powerful tool, but not an impenetrable one. Understanding these limitations is key to creating a realistic and effective plan.
An effective estate plan is an act of intentional stewardship. It anticipates challenges and puts a thoughtful, legally sound framework in place to protect the people you care about most. A spendthrift trust is one of the most effective instruments we have for that purpose.
If you are considering how to structure an inheritance for a loved one, the first step is to document your specific intentions and concerns. We can then schedule a confidential review to determine if a spendthrift provision is the appropriate instrument for your family’s legacy.


