When a surviving spouse in Brooklyn walks into a bank with a death certificate and a Last Will and Testament, they usually expect to walk out with access to their late partner’s accounts. Instead, the branch manager hands the paperwork back and says, “We need Letters Testamentary.” That is the exact moment most families discover what a will actually does—and what it cannot do.
I spend a significant portion of my practice at Morgan Legal Group explaining this distinction to clients who believe drafting a will is the final step in protecting their family. A will does not bypass the legal system—it is an active invitation into it. Understanding the mechanical differences between a trust and a will is the first step in deliberate legacy planning.
The Reality of Proceeding with Only a Will
When you rely solely on a Last Will and Testament, you are essentially leaving a set of instructions for a judge. Before a single dollar can be distributed or a deed transferred, the document must go through a formal legal proceeding called probate. In New York, this means filing the original will, the death certificate, and a detailed petition with the Surrogate’s Court in the county where the deceased lived.
This process is neither private nor instantaneous. Under the Surrogate’s Court Procedure Act (SCPA) Article 14, a will must be formally proven valid. Every legal heir—even an estranged relative you intentionally omitted—must be notified and given the opportunity to object. Specifically, SCPA §1410 dictates that anyone whose financial interest would be adversely affected by the will’s admission to probate has the legal standing to file objections. If your family dynamic is fractured, a will provides a very public stage for grievances.
Probate also consumes time. Even an uncontested estate in New York takes seven to nine months to settle. During those initial weeks, accounts remain frozen. Surviving family members are left scrambling to cover mortgages, property taxes, or funeral expenses out of pocket.
The Strategic Advantage of a Revocable Living Trust
A revocable living trust operates on an entirely different legal chassis. Instead of leaving instructions for a judge to execute after your passing, you create a legal custodian for your assets while you are still alive. You transfer your primary residence, your brokerage accounts, and your business interests into the name of this trust.
Because you act as the initial trustee, you retain absolute control over these assets. You can spend the money, sell the property, refinance your home, or dissolve the trust entirely if you change your mind. The critical difference occurs at the moment of death. Because you as an individual did not technically own the assets—the trust did—there is no estate to probate.
Your named successor trustee simply steps into your shoes. They present the trust document and a death certificate to the financial institutions, and they immediately assume their fiduciary duty to manage or distribute the assets according to your specific instructions.
Stewardship.
That is what a trust provides. It is an intentional transition of wealth that occurs privately, quietly, and immediately in the attorney’s office rather than in a crowded courtroom.
Privacy and the Public Record
Privacy is a critical distinction between these two instruments. A probated will becomes public record. Anyone can walk into Surrogate’s Court and read the document, discovering exactly who inherited what, the identities of your beneficiaries, and the overall structure of your estate.
A trust remains a private agreement. It is never filed with the court unless active litigation arises. For high-net-worth individuals, business owners, or families who simply value their discretion, this confidentiality prevents opportunistic creditors, distant relatives, or the general public from peering into their financial affairs.
Incapacity: The Vulnerability of a Will
A will is strictly a death-contingent document. It does absolutely nothing to protect you while you are alive. If you suffer a severe stroke or cognitive decline, your will cannot authorize anyone to sign your tax returns, manage your real estate, or pay your medical bills. Your family would be forced to petition the court for guardianship under Mental Hygiene Law Article 81—a grueling, expensive, and emotionally draining ordeal.
A trust is drafted with contingencies for incapacity. If you lose the ability to manage your affairs, your successor trustee takes over seamlessly. They manage your assets for your benefit without court intervention, ensuring your bills are paid and your property is maintained. It is a protective measure for you just as much as it is a vehicle for your heirs.
Choosing the Right Instrument for Your Family
Not every estate requires a trust. If you have minimal assets, no real estate, and a completely unified family, a simple will—paired with prudent beneficiary designations on your retirement accounts and life insurance—might be sufficient.
However, we typically consider a trust essential in the following scenarios:
- Owning real estate in multiple states: If you own a primary residence in Manhattan and a vacation home in Florida, a will requires two separate probate proceedings in two different states. A trust consolidates this into one private administration.
- Protecting minor children: A trust allows you to appoint a trustee to manage funds prudently until children reach an age of maturity, rather than the court handing an eighteen-year-old a massive lump sum.
- Blended families: When spouses have children from previous marriages, a trust can provide income for the surviving spouse while guaranteeing that the remaining principal eventually passes to the grantor’s own children.
Proper estate planning is about examining your assets, your family structure, and the legacy you want to leave behind. A will guarantees court involvement, while a trust provides a private mechanism for generational wealth transfer. Neither is inherently right or wrong—but choosing the wrong one for your specific circumstances can cost your family dearly in time, legal fees, and emotional capital.
To understand how your current assets would be treated under New York law upon your passing, schedule a 30-minute review of your existing estate documents with our firm.




