When a family inherits a Brooklyn brownstone purchased by their parents in 1978 for $40,000, they rarely view themselves as heirs to a massive fortune. They are simply taking over the family home. Yet when the formal appraisal returns at $3.5 million and the accompanying retirement accounts push the total estate value past the state tax threshold, reality sets in. In the eyes of the law, the tax authorities, and the Surrogate’s Court, they have just received a large inheritance.
What actually makes an inheritance “large”? It is not a subjective feeling. It is a strict set of legal, procedural, and financial thresholds dictating how an estate must be managed, taxed, and distributed. We find that families often misunderstand the legal weight of their assets until it is too late.
The Surrogate’s Court Threshold
To understand what constitutes a large inheritance, we first look at how the court categorizes estates. Under the Surrogate’s Court Procedure Act (SCPA) Article 13, New York defines a “small estate” as personal property valued at less than $50,000, excluding real estate. If you inherit $45,000 in a bank account, you can use the streamlined voluntary administration process. It is a relatively simple affair.
The moment real estate is involved—regardless of its value—or the personal assets cross that $50,000 mark, you are no longer dealing with a small estate. You are thrust into full probate or administration. At this level, the inheritance is legally large enough to require formal fiduciary appointments, creditor notice periods, and rigorous accounting.
The executor or administrator must assume strict fiduciary duties, becoming personally liable if they distribute funds before satisfying known creditors or tax obligations. The sheer administrative burden of proving the will, clearing title, and satisfying the court makes the inheritance significant from a procedural standpoint alone.
The Taxation Threshold and the State Cliff
The second, and perhaps most punishing, definition of a large inheritance comes from the Department of Taxation and Finance. The federal government currently sets a very high bar for estate taxes, shielding the vast majority of Americans. Our state is far less forgiving.
For 2024, the state estate tax exemption is $6.94 million. If an estate falls below this number, no state estate tax is owed. But New York employs a notorious mechanism known as the “tax cliff.” If the estate exceeds the exemption amount by just five percent, the entire exemption is wiped out. The estate is taxed from dollar one.
Stewardship. This is where estate planning stops being about filling out forms and starts being about protecting generational wealth. An inheritance of $6.9 million might pass tax-free, but an inheritance of $7.5 million triggers a massive tax bill that can force the sudden sale of family properties or the liquidation of closely held business shares. In these scenarios, the size of the inheritance becomes a liability if the estate was not structured with deliberate foresight.
Complexity as a Measure of Size
Beyond statutory limits and tax brackets, an inheritance is considered large when the assets themselves introduce significant complexity. A million-dollar inheritance consisting entirely of a single brokerage account is procedurally straightforward. A million-dollar inheritance consisting of a commercial property with environmental issues, a minority stake in a limited liability company, and an art collection is highly complex.
When we evaluate an estate, we look at the burden placed on the executor or trustee. If the assets require ongoing management, specialized valuation, or restructuring to avoid disputes among heirs, the inheritance warrants serious, deliberate planning.
- Valuation challenges: Illiquid assets require professional appraisals and negotiations with tax authorities.
- Management burdens: Rental properties or active businesses require an immediate custodian to prevent a loss of value during the probate process.
- Distribution hurdles: Dividing a single physical asset among four siblings often requires buy-outs or forced sales if no prior agreement exists.
This level of complexity often involves moving assets out of an individual’s name and into a trust long before they pass away. A well-drafted trust acts as a custodian, holding the assets in a way that minimizes court interference and provides clear instructions for the successor trustee.
The Need for Creditor and Divorce Protection
Another hallmark of a large inheritance is the need to protect wealth from the beneficiaries’ own life events. When parents leave behind substantial assets, they usually intend for that money to support their children and grandchildren. They do not intend to fund a child’s future divorce settlement or pay off a business creditor.
If a large inheritance is left outright—meaning a check is simply handed to the beneficiary—that money becomes commingled with their personal assets. It is instantly vulnerable. Prudent estate planning avoids this outcome by keeping the inheritance inside a protective trust. The beneficiary can still access the funds for their health, education, maintenance, and support, but the principal remains shielded from outside claims.
Under Estates, Powers and Trusts Law (EPTL) §7-1.5, New York automatically provides spendthrift protection for certain trust income interests, restricting a beneficiary from transferring their right to receive income and shielding it from creditors. This is the essence of generational wealth preservation. It ensures that a large inheritance actually remains large as it passes down the family tree.
Protecting What You Pass Down
Leaving a substantial inheritance is a profound act of legacy. But without a deliberate framework, that wealth can be severely eroded by taxes, creditor claims, or mismanagement. The goal is to ensure the assets you spent a lifetime accumulating serve your family exactly as intended, rather than creating a procedural nightmare in Surrogate’s Court.
If you are preparing to leave or receive substantial assets, the structure of the transfer matters far more than the dollar amount. Reviewing how your assets are titled and designated is the first line of defense against unintended tax consequences. I invite you to schedule a beneficiary and deed audit with our office to determine exactly how your estate will be treated under current New York law.


