The trust document sits on the kitchen table. You’ve just been named successor trustee for your parents’ estate, and your siblings are already asking when they will receive their inheritance. The document is dense with legal language, and the responsibility feels immense. Your duty is not just to write checks—it’s to act as a fiduciary, a steward of the legacy your parents deliberately constructed.
I see this scenario frequently in my practice. A well-intentioned family member is handed a role with significant legal and financial obligations, often without preparation. Fulfilling this duty requires precision, a clear understanding of New York law, and an unwavering commitment to the trust creator’s intent.
The Trust Document Is Your Mandate
Before a single dollar can be distributed, a trustee’s first and most critical job is to read and understand the trust instrument itself. This document is not a set of suggestions; it is a legal directive. It outlines who the beneficiaries are, what they are entitled to receive, and when—and under what conditions—they are to receive it.
Distributions can be structured in several ways:
- Outright Distributions: The simplest form. Upon the grantor’s death, the trust assets are distributed directly to the beneficiaries, and the trust is terminated.
- Staggered Distributions: The grantor may have decided a beneficiary will receive their inheritance in stages—for example, one-third at age 25, one-third at age 30, and the final third at age 35. The trustee must manage the trust assets for years, making distributions only at these specific milestones.
- Discretionary Distributions: Many trusts give the trustee discretion to make distributions for a beneficiary’s “health, education, maintenance, and support” (HEMS). This is a common structure for trusts intended to last a lifetime and requires the most judgment from the trustee.
Your job as trustee is to execute the plan the grantor designed, not to substitute your own judgment for theirs. If the trust says a beneficiary receives their share at age 30, you cannot distribute it at 28 because they want to buy a house in Brooklyn—no matter how much pressure you’re under.
Exercising Discretion and the Prudent Investor Rule
When a trust allows for discretionary distributions, the trustee’s role becomes more complex. How do you decide what qualifies as a valid need for “maintenance and support”? Does it include a down payment on a first home? Starting a business? A family vacation? The trust document may provide guidance, but often the trustee must interpret these standards based on the beneficiary’s circumstances and the grantor’s likely intent.
Here, your fiduciary duty is absolute. You must act in the best interest of the beneficiary while preserving the trust principal for the long term. This is not a guideline—it is a strict legal standard. In New York, a trustee’s investment and management decisions are governed by the Prudent Investor Act, codified in EPTL § 11-2.3. This statute requires a trustee to “exercise reasonable care, skill and caution to make and implement investment and management decisions as a prudent investor would.”
While this law focuses on investments, its principle extends to distributions. A prudent trustee does not just hand over money on request. They might ask for invoices, business plans, or school tuition bills. They document every decision and the reasoning behind it. This is not about being difficult—it is about fulfilling a legal duty to manage the trust assets responsibly for all beneficiaries, present and future.
The Duty to Account and Communicate
A common source of conflict between trustees and beneficiaries is a lack of communication. Beneficiaries have a right to be kept reasonably informed about the trust and its administration. As a trustee, you have a legal obligation to provide a regular accounting, which is a detailed report of all trust activity—what has come in, what has gone out, and what remains.
Proactive communication prevents suspicion and resentment. It is far better to explain why a distribution request was denied—and how that decision aligns with the trust’s terms—than to ignore the request and force a beneficiary to take legal action. Unresolved, these disputes often end up in Surrogate’s Court, leading to costly litigation that depletes the very assets the trust was designed to protect. Transparency and clear record-keeping are a trustee’s best defense.
Final Distributions and Closing a Trust
Once all the trust’s terms have been met—debts paid, assets managed, and distributions made according to schedule—the process of formally closing the trust begins. This typically involves preparing a final accounting for the beneficiaries to review and approve.
We often advise trustees to have beneficiaries sign a receipt and release agreement. This document confirms they have received their full distribution and releases the trustee from any future liability related to their management of the trust. It is a crucial final step that provides legal closure and protects the trustee from future claims after the books are closed.
Serving as a trustee is a significant undertaking that honors the confidence the grantor placed in you. It is an act of stewardship. If you have been named a trustee and are uncertain of your duties, the first step is a thorough review of the trust instrument with legal counsel. We can schedule a Trustee’s Initial Consultation to interpret the document and outline your specific responsibilities and protections under New York law.




