I often meet with business owners who have spent 30 years building a company from the ground up. They’ve accumulated significant personal assets, but one unexpected lawsuit—a business dispute, a car accident—could put their family’s entire future at risk. Their first question is always the same: “How can I protect what I’ve built?”
The conversation almost always turns to trusts. But the term “trust” is too general. It’s like asking a doctor for “medicine.” The real question isn’t if you need a trust, but what kind of trust serves your purpose. For asset protection, the distinction that matters most is the one between control and permanence. This is the fundamental trade-off every family must consider.
The Illusion of Control: The Revocable Living Trust
Many of my clients come to me having already established a revocable living trust. It’s a foundational estate planning tool, and for good reason. It’s flexible. You, as the grantor, can amend it, change beneficiaries, or even dissolve it entirely. You maintain complete control over the assets held within it. During your lifetime, for all practical purposes, those assets are still yours.
That is precisely why a revocable trust offers almost no protection from creditors or lawsuits. This is not just a practical reality—it is codified in New York law. EPTL § 10-10.6 states that when the creator of a trust retains the power to revoke it, they are considered the absolute owner of the property as far as their creditors are concerned. If you can freely access the assets, so can someone with a judgment against you.
A revocable trust is an excellent instrument for avoiding the time and expense of Surrogate’s Court and for managing your affairs if you become incapacitated. It is a tool for smooth succession, not for asset defense. Believing it will shield your life’s work from a legal challenge is a common and costly misunderstanding.
The Fortress of Intent: The Irrevocable Trust
An irrevocable trust operates on the opposite principle. When you transfer assets into an irrevocable trust, you are making a deliberate and—as the name implies—permanent choice. You relinquish control and ownership. The assets no longer belong to you; they belong to the trust, an independent legal entity managed by a trustee for the benefit of your named beneficiaries.
This is where true asset protection begins. Because you no longer own the assets, they are generally beyond the reach of your future personal creditors. The “fortress” is built by your intentional act of giving up control. This is a significant step, and it’s not for everyone. It requires foresight and a clear understanding of your long-term goals for your family and your legacy.
This structure is particularly critical in contexts like long-term care planning. In New York, for an individual to be eligible for Medicaid to cover nursing home costs, their assets must be below a certain threshold. Transferring assets to an irrevocable trust can help, but it must be done with prudence. The state imposes a five-year “look-back” period from the date of the Medicaid application. Any assets transferred to the trust within that five-year window can still be counted, potentially delaying eligibility. This isn’t a last-minute maneuver; it’s an act of long-range stewardship.
A Word on “Asset Protection Trusts”
You may have heard of a specific vehicle called a Domestic Asset Protection Trust (DAPT). These are a type of self-settled trust where the grantor can also be a beneficiary and still receive some creditor protection. However, New York is not one of the states that have enacted DAPT legislation. While some people attempt to create these trusts in other jurisdictions like Nevada or Delaware, their enforceability for a New York resident can be challenged in court.
In our practice, when a client’s primary goal is asset protection, we are discussing a carefully structured irrevocable trust. It might be a Medicaid Asset Protection Trust, designed specifically with the five-year look-back in mind, or another type of trust structured to hold a business or real estate for the next generation. The name is less important than the mechanics—and the irrevocable nature of the transfer is the central mechanic.
Stewardship Requires Deliberate Action
Deciding to place assets into an irrevocable trust is one of the most significant decisions a person can make about their legacy. It is not a transactional event but a profound statement of intent. You are choosing to prioritize the long-term security of your family over your own immediate access and control.
This is not a decision to be made from a template or a website form. The terms of the trust—who serves as trustee, what powers they hold, how distributions are made—must reflect your unique family circumstances and values. The fiduciary duty of the trustee is a serious legal obligation, and selecting the right person or institution for that role is as important as the trust’s legal architecture.
The right structure provides a framework for generational wealth and security. The wrong one can lead to conflict, litigation, and the erosion of the very assets you sought to protect.
The first step is to map what you own and what potential risks you face. We reserve time each week to conduct a preliminary asset and risk assessment for individuals and families considering these structures. If you would like to have that conversation, you can call my office and request an asset protection review.



