A client of mine, a surgeon with a thriving practice in Manhattan, spent two decades building a portfolio of rental properties in Brooklyn. It was his retirement plan and the legacy he intended for his children. Then, a frivolous malpractice suit threatened not just his practice but every property he owned personally. The lawsuit was baseless, but the threat was real—it exposed the vulnerability of a lifetime’s work not properly insulated from professional risk.
This is a situation we see often. For professionals and property owners, personal and business liabilities are not always separate. A legal judgment can attach to personal assets, including the family home or investment real estate. An asset protection trust is one of the most effective structures we can establish to build a wall between your personal wealth and these external threats. It is a form of deliberate, forward-looking stewardship.
What an Asset Protection Trust Accomplishes
An asset protection trust is an irrevocable trust. By placing real estate into it, you formally relinquish direct ownership. The property is no longer titled in your name, but in the name of the trust. A trustee—a person or institution you appoint—manages the property on behalf of the beneficiaries you name, who are typically your children or other family members.
The operative term is “irrevocable.” Because you have given up control and cannot simply dissolve the trust to take the property back, the assets are generally beyond the reach of your future personal creditors. The trust owns the property, not you. This is not a loophole; it is a legally recognized principle of trust law. It is an intentional act of placing family assets under the care of a fiduciary for generational benefit, insulating them from the contingencies of your own financial or professional life.
This is not, however, a tool for every situation. Setting one up requires a deep understanding of your long-term goals, because the transfer is permanent. We work with clients to ensure they retain enough assets outside the trust for their own liquidity while securing their core legacy assets within it.
The Critical Line Between Planning and Illegality
An asset protection trust cannot be used to hide from existing debts. Setting one up to defraud known creditors is illegal, and the courts will unwind it. The law permits prudent planning for future, unknown liabilities, not evasion of current obligations.
New York law is clear on this point. Estates, Powers and Trusts Law (EPTL) §7-3.1 states that a trust you create for your own benefit is considered void against your creditors. This is why effective asset protection trusts in this state are not for the benefit of the grantor—the person who creates it. You cannot be both the creator and the primary beneficiary and expect protection from your own creditors.
This is the bright line we must respect. The time to build the fortress is when the seas are calm. If a lawsuit has already been filed or a major debt is coming due, it is too late to transfer assets into a trust to protect them from that specific threat. Doing so would likely be deemed a “fraudulent conveyance” under the Debtor and Creditor Law, and a judge would reverse the transfer. Effective asset protection is proactive, never reactive.
Choosing the Right Custodian for Your Legacy
Because you are giving up direct control, the choice of trustee is one of the most important decisions you will make. The trustee is the legal owner of the trust’s assets and has a profound fiduciary duty to manage them responsibly and in accordance with the trust document. They must act solely for the beneficiaries.
For an asset protection trust to be effective, the trustee must be independent. Naming yourself as trustee defeats the purpose. While you can name a trusted family member, this can create difficult personal dynamics. Often, the most prudent choice is a professional or corporate trustee—an attorney, an accountant, or a trust company.
An independent trustee provides an objective, unemotional layer of administration. They are bound by law to follow the trust’s terms, and their independence reinforces the trust’s legal standing if it is ever challenged by a creditor. At my firm, we spend a significant amount of time counseling clients on this selection, as the right trustee ensures the structure functions as intended for decades.
Is This the Right Path for Your Property?
An asset protection trust is a powerful instrument, but it is not a universal one. For a single rental property, a well-structured LLC may provide sufficient liability protection. For a substantial real estate portfolio or a primary residence of significant value, a trust is often a superior vehicle for long-term, generational protection.
The clients who benefit most are those in high-liability professions or those with significant wealth that could make them a target for litigation. The goal is to separate their personal legacy assets from their professional risk profile. It is a strategic decision that trades a degree of control for a much greater degree of security. Stewardship.
This is about more than legal mechanics. It’s about ensuring that what you’ve built endures, protected from unforeseen events. It’s about making sure the legacy you intend for your family is the one they actually receive, unburdened by external claims.
If you own significant real estate and are concerned about its exposure to future risks, the first step is a clear-eyed inventory. Consider scheduling a confidential asset review with our firm, where we can analyze your holdings and discuss whether a trust is a prudent measure for your family’s legacy.





