Most people assume estate planning means writing a will. Asset protection sounds like something only the ultra-wealthy need. In reality, both are tightly connected disciplines that every New Yorker with a home, a retirement account, a business interest, or a family should address — ideally together, and ideally before a crisis forces the issue.
At Morgan Legal Group, attorney Russel Morgan, Esq. serves clients across New York State — from New York City and Long Island to Westchester, the Hudson Valley, and communities Upstate. This page explains the core concepts in plain English so you arrive at your first conversation informed and ready to act.
What a Complete New York Estate Plan Looks Like
A sound NY plan coordinates four legal instruments, each covering a different scenario:
| Document | Governing Law | What It Does |
|---|---|---|
| Will | EPTL §3-2.1 | Names beneficiaries; appoints executor; requires 2 witnesses |
| Revocable / Irrevocable Trust | EPTL Article 7 | Controls distribution, can avoid probate, may protect assets |
| Durable Power of Attorney | GOL §5-1513 | Authorizes an agent to act on your finances if you’re incapacitated |
| Health Care Proxy | Public Health Law Art. 29-C | Names someone to make medical decisions when you cannot |
All four work in concert. Missing any one creates a gap that courts, creditors, or family conflict can slip through.
How Asset Protection Actually Works in New York
New York law draws a firm line here, and understanding it prevents expensive mistakes.
What New York does NOT allow: You cannot place your own assets into a self-settled trust and then shield them from your own creditors. New York has not adopted domestic asset-protection trust (DAPT) legislation. A revocable living trust offers zero creditor protection for the person who created it.
What New York DOES allow — legitimate tools:
- Irrevocable trusts — once assets transfer, they generally leave your taxable estate and reach beyond your creditors’ grasp, provided the transfer is not a fraudulent conveyance
- Medicaid Asset Protection Trusts (MAPTs) — an irrevocable trust with a strict 5-year look-back; transfers must happen well before a Medicaid application
- LLCs and business entities — separate personal liability from business liability
- ERISA-qualified retirement accounts — broadly protected under federal law
- CPLR Article 52 statutory exemptions — including the NY homestead exemption (CPLR §5206)
- Life insurance and adequate liability coverage — often the most cost-effective first layer of protection
Timing is the single most critical factor. Under New York’s Debtor & Creditor Law, transfers made to hinder, delay, or defraud existing or reasonably foreseeable creditors can be unwound as voidable (fraudulent) conveyances. Asset protection must be structured before a claim arises — never as a reaction to one.
The 2026 New York Estate Tax: A Cliff You Cannot Afford to Miss
New York imposes its own estate tax, separate from federal. For 2026:
- Basic exclusion: $7,350,000
- Cliff at 105%: $7,717,500 — an estate even slightly above this threshold loses the entire exclusion and pays tax on the full value at progressive rates of 3%–16%
- No New York gift tax — but gifts made within three years of death are added back into the taxable estate
Proper trust and estate-tax planning can position an estate below the cliff or significantly reduce exposure above it. Learn more from the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance.
Ready to Build Your Plan?
Understanding the framework is the first step. The second is matching these tools to your specific assets, family, and goals — which is what we do.
Schedule a consultation with Russel Morgan, Esq. and get a clear picture of what protecting your legacy actually requires under New York law.
Further reading from Morgan Legal Group: why estate planning is so important.