When a Manhattan family creates a revocable living trust to protect their assets, they usually walk out of our office holding a heavy, leather-bound binder. The most common question I hear as they pack it away is whether that binder now needs to be filed at a courthouse. People assume legal documents only carry weight once stamped, filed, and logged by a county clerk.
The short answer is no. A lifetime trust is a private agreement between you (the grantor) and the individual or institution managing the assets (the trustee). Unlike a Last Will and Testament, which must eventually be submitted to Surrogate’s Court, a living trust does not have to be recorded with any municipal or county office to be valid. It remains entirely private.
However, that privacy comes with rigid execution rules and specific exceptions regarding the assets held inside the trust. Understanding the line between private instructions and public ownership records is a fundamental part of generational stewardship.
The Privacy Advantage of a Living Trust
To understand why a trust does not need to be recorded, it helps to look at the alternative. When an individual passes away with only a will, their estate must go through probate. Under SCPA Article 14, the executor must file the original will with the Surrogate’s Court. Once filed, that document becomes a matter of public record. Anyone can request the file and read exactly who inherited what, who was intentionally disinherited, and the general financial footprint of the deceased.
A properly structured living trust operates outside of this system. Because the trust—not the individual—owns the assets at the time of death, there is no probate estate to administer. The successor trustee simply steps in and distributes the assets according to the private instructions contained in that leather binder. No court filings. No public exposure. No delays.
This confidentiality is why executives, business owners, and high-net-worth individuals heavily favor trusts. It shields family wealth dynamics from public scrutiny, creditors, and opportunistic third parties.
Execution Formalities Under EPTL § 7-1.17
Just because a trust is kept in your desk drawer rather than a government filing cabinet does not mean it is an informal document. The law demands strict adherence to execution formalities to prevent fraud and ensure deliberate intent.
Under EPTL § 7-1.17, a lifetime trust must be in writing. Furthermore, it must be either acknowledged by a notary public in the exact manner required for the recording of a conveyance of real property, or it must be executed in the presence of two witnesses who also sign the document.
If these statutory requirements are ignored, the trust is entirely invalid. We frequently review DIY estate plans or documents drafted by out-of-state attorneys that fail to meet these local standards. An improperly executed trust is no better than having no trust at all. The document does not need to be handed to a clerk, but it must be executed as if it were going to be.
When Real Estate Meets Trust Law
The confusion surrounding trust recording usually stems from the way trusts interact with real estate. While the trust instrument itself is private, the transfer of real property into that trust is highly public.
A trust only controls the assets it actually owns. If you create a trust but never transfer your primary residence into it, the trust is essentially an empty vessel. To fund the trust with real estate, you must execute a new deed transferring ownership from your individual name to you as the trustee of your trust.
That deed must absolutely be recorded with the county clerk or the city register. The public record will show that a trust owns the property, but the underlying terms of that trust—who inherits the property, at what age, and under what conditions—remain entirely confidential. The public sees the custodian. They do not see the beneficiaries.
Do Beneficiaries Have a Right to See It?
A trust may be shielded from the general public, but it is not a secret from the people it is meant to serve. Once the grantor passes away and the trust becomes irrevocable, the trustee assumes a strict fiduciary duty to the beneficiaries.
Part of that duty involves transparency. Beneficiaries who hold an equitable interest in the trust have a legal right to be kept informed about the administration of the assets, which generally includes the right to see a copy of the trust document. If a trustee refuses to provide the document or attempts to hide the terms of the inheritance, the beneficiaries can petition the Surrogate’s Court to compel disclosure.
Stewardship.
That is the core function of a trustee. They are a custodian of your legacy, and their actions must remain visible to the people you intended to protect, even if the rest of the world remains blind to the details.
Testamentary Trusts: The Exception to the Rule
One major exception exists regarding trust privacy: the testamentary trust. Instead of creating a trust while alive, some individuals include provisions in their will that create a trust only after they die.
Because a testamentary trust is birthed through the probate process, its terms are contained entirely within the Last Will and Testament. Since the will must be filed and validated by the court, the terms of the testamentary trust inherently become public record. If keeping your family’s financial directives private is a priority, a testamentary trust is the wrong mechanism.
Securing Your Family’s Private Legacy
The distinction between what must be recorded and what remains private is often the difference between a seamless asset transfer and years of public litigation. A trust gives you the power to control your wealth quietly, but only if the mechanics of execution and funding are handled with precision.
If you are unsure whether your assets have been properly transferred into your existing trust, or if your documents meet the current statutory requirements for execution, do not wait for a crisis to find out. Bring your existing estate planning binder to our Madison Avenue office for a formal trust funding review to verify that your real estate and financial accounts are accurately titled.





