A trust is a legal arrangement where a grantor transfers assets to a trustee to hold and manage for beneficiaries. The core benefit in New York is that trust assets pass outside probate — privately, faster, and without filing in the Surrogate’s Court. For NYC residents, trusts also solve a specific problem: holding co-op shares (which EPTL 7-1.12 expressly permits) so an apartment transfers to heirs without a probate-delayed board approval process.

Whether you need a trust depends on your goals. Below we break down the main NYC use cases — probate avoidance, Medicaid protection, and co-op/condo transfer.

Revocable living trust vs. a will

A revocable living trust holds your assets during life (you usually serve as your own trustee) and distributes them at death without probate. A will, by contrast, must be admitted to your borough’s Surrogate’s Court.

Feature Revocable living trust Will
Avoids probate Yes, for funded assets No
Privacy Private; not filed publicly Becomes a public court record
Effective during incapacity Yes — successor trustee steps in No
Upfront cost Higher Lower
Control / amendability Fully amendable while you live Amendable while you live

Definition — Grantor: the person who creates a trust and transfers assets into it. Definition — Trustee: the person or institution that manages trust assets for beneficiaries. Definition — Beneficiary: a person entitled to benefit from the trust. Definition — Corpus: the property held in the trust (also called the principal or res).

Irrevocable trusts and Medicaid Asset Protection Trusts

An irrevocable trust cannot be freely amended or revoked once created — and that permanence is the point. By giving up control, the grantor removes assets from their own estate for tax or Medicaid-eligibility purposes.

A Medicaid Asset Protection Trust (MAPT) is an irrevocable trust used to shelter a home or savings from long-term-care costs. New York applies a five-year lookback for institutional (nursing-home) Medicaid: transfers into the trust must generally occur more than five years before applying. For NYC residents whose largest asset is an appreciated co-op or condo, a MAPT can preserve the home for heirs while protecting Medicaid eligibility. Timing is everything — start early.

Trust types at a glance

Trust type Revocable? Typical NYC use
Revocable living trust Yes Probate avoidance, incapacity planning
Irrevocable trust No Estate-tax reduction, asset protection
Medicaid Asset Protection Trust No Sheltering home/savings from nursing-home costs
Supplemental (special) needs trust — EPTL 7-1.12 Usually irrevocable Providing for a disabled beneficiary without losing benefits
Testamentary trust Created by will Trust that springs into being at death

A supplemental needs trust under EPTL 7-1.12 lets you provide for a disabled loved one without disqualifying them from means-tested benefits like Medicaid and SSI.

How funding a trust works (and why unfunded trusts fail)

Creating a trust document is only half the job. You must fund it — retitle assets into the trust’s name: move bank and brokerage accounts, record a new deed for a condo, and assign co-op shares to the trust. An unfunded trust controls nothing, and the assets you forgot to transfer still go through probate. For NYC co-ops, funding means getting the co-op board’s consent to assign shares into the trust — start that conversation early, because boards review trust documents.

Trustee duties under New York law (EPTL 11-2.3)

A trustee is a fiduciary. Under New York’s Prudent Investor Act, EPTL 11-2.3, a trustee must invest and manage trust assets with care, skill and caution, diversify holdings, and act in the beneficiaries’ interest. Trustees who breach these duties can be held personally liable — the same prudent-fiduciary standard that governs an executor.

The NYC angle: why trusts matter for co-ops and condos

New York has no transfer-on-death (TOD) deeds for real property, so a co-op or condo cannot simply pass by a beneficiary designation the way a brokerage account can. That leaves two paths: probate, or a trust. A revocable trust holding your co-op shares means your successor trustee can deal with the co-op board for transfer immediately, without waiting months for letters testamentary. In a Manhattan or Brooklyn estate where the apartment is the largest asset, that difference can mean the family avoids a year of limbo.

Frequently asked questions

Do I need a trust if I already have a will? A will alone goes through probate. A funded revocable trust avoids it. Many NYC residents use both — a trust for major assets and a “pour-over” will as backup.

Can a trust hold my co-op shares? Yes. EPTL 7-1.12 and standard practice allow co-op shares to be held in trust, subject to the co-op board’s consent.

Does a revocable trust protect against Medicaid or creditors? No. Only an irrevocable trust, properly structured and seasoned past the five-year lookback, offers Medicaid protection.

Will a trust save NY estate tax? A revocable trust does not by itself; certain irrevocable trusts and credit-shelter planning can reduce NY estate tax exposure.

Plan your trust

To decide whether a trust fits your NYC estate, book a 30-minute consultation with Russel Morgan of Morgan Legal Group. Informational only; not legal advice.

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