I often sit with families in our Manhattan office who have spent a lifetime building a life in one place—a brownstone in Brooklyn, a family home on Long Island. They’ve paid the mortgage, seen children grow up in its rooms, and now see it as the cornerstone of their legacy. Then they ask a simple question born from a neighbor’s difficult experience: “What happens to this house when I’m gone? I don’t want my kids fighting or stuck in court for a year.”
Their concern is valid. When a New York property is owned by an individual, upon their death, that asset is frozen. It becomes part of their estate, which must pass through Surrogate’s Court in a process called probate. This means the future of the family home is in the hands of a judge, a public proceeding, and a timetable that is not your own. Putting your house in a trust is the most direct and prudent way to avoid this scenario.
Stewardship Over Court Proceedings
Placing your home into a trust is an act of stewardship. You are not just planning for its transfer; you are ensuring its continuity. Without a trust, your family will likely need to hire an attorney to petition the Surrogate’s Court to get the authority to manage or sell the home. This process can take months, sometimes longer, during which time the property cannot be sold, refinanced, or distributed.
Everything filed in Surrogate’s Court is a matter of public record. Wills, lists of assets, names of beneficiaries—it is all accessible. For many families, the privacy of their financial affairs is paramount. A trust is a private agreement. The terms of the trust, the assets it holds, and the identity of your beneficiaries remain confidential.
By placing the home in a trust, you appoint a successor trustee—a responsible child, a trusted friend, or a corporate trustee—who can step in immediately upon your death or incapacity. There is no court-mandated delay. The trustee has the authority to manage the property according to your instructions, whether that means selling it and distributing the proceeds or allowing a family member to continue living there. The transition is seamless because, legally, the owner—the trust—never died.
The Mechanics of Transferring Your Home to a Trust
When you put your house in a trust, you are changing the name on the deed. The title is transferred from your name as an individual (e.g., “Jane Smith”) to your name as a trustee of your trust (e.g., “Jane Smith, as Trustee of the Jane Smith Revocable Trust dated January 1, 2024”).
This requires executing and recording a new deed. This legal process must be done correctly to be valid. In New York, we must adhere to the Real Property Law. While a statute like New York’s RPL §240-c requires that deeds be written in plain English, the legal precision needed to properly fund a trust is not a do-it-yourself project. An error in the legal description or execution can invalidate the transfer, sending the property straight back to probate—the very outcome we work to avoid.
For most clients, we use a revocable living trust. This provides maximum flexibility. As the grantor and the initial trustee, you retain complete control. You can sell the house, refinance the mortgage, or even dissolve the trust entirely. Nothing changes about your day-to-day life or your tax situation. The trust only becomes irrevocable upon your death, locking in your instructions and protecting the legacy you’ve built.
Answering Your Practical Questions
Clients have practical questions about how this change in ownership affects them. The two most common are about control and mortgages.
First, you do not lose control. With a revocable trust, you are the trustee. You manage the property just as you always have. You decide when to make repairs, whether to rent it out, or when to sell it. The only difference is the name in which you sign the documents. You sign as “trustee.” The trust is a tool you control, not one that controls you.
Second is the question of an existing mortgage. Transferring a mortgaged property into a revocable living trust is standard practice. Federal law—specifically the Garn-St. Germain Depository Institutions Act of 1982—prevents lenders from calling the loan due when you transfer your primary residence into a trust. We handle the communication with the lender to ensure the transfer is recorded smoothly and does not disrupt your mortgage or homeowner’s insurance.
A trust is an intentional legal structure designed to carry out your specific wishes for your most significant asset. It replaces the uncertainty of a court process with the certainty of your own deliberate plan.
If you are thinking about the future stewardship of your home, the process begins with a clear understanding of how it is currently owned. Locate the most recent deed to your property. With that document, we can schedule a confidential consultation to review your goals and determine if a trust is the right vehicle for your family’s legacy.





