If you have heard the word “trust” tossed around and quietly nodded along without really knowing what it means, you are in the right place. A trust is one of the most useful tools in estate planning, but it is also one of the most misunderstood. This guide explains, in everyday language, what a trust actually is, the main types used in New York, what a trust can protect, and — just as importantly — what it cannot. No legal jargon dumped on you without a translation.
Morgan Legal Group, led by attorney Russel Morgan, Esq., helps families across New York State — from New York City and Long Island to Westchester, the Hudson Valley, and Upstate — put the right plan in place. Let’s start at the beginning.
What Is a Trust, Really?
Think of a trust as a private legal “container” you create to hold your assets — your home, savings, investments, a business interest — and a set of written instructions for how those assets should be managed and eventually distributed.
Every trust involves three roles:
- The grantor (sometimes called the settlor) — that’s you, the person who creates the trust and puts assets into it.
- The trustee — the person or institution who manages the assets according to your instructions. With many trusts, you can be your own trustee while you’re alive.
- The beneficiaries — the people (or charities) who benefit from the trust, such as your spouse, children, or grandchildren.
In New York, trusts are governed primarily by the Estates, Powers and Trusts Law (EPTL) Article 7. A trust does not replace a will — it works alongside one. In fact, a complete New York estate plan usually includes four documents working together:
| Document | New York Authority | What It Does |
|---|---|---|
| Last Will and Testament | EPTL §3-2.1 | Names guardians, distributes assets not held in trust |
| Trust(s) | EPTL Article 7 | Holds and manages assets; can avoid probate |
| Durable Power of Attorney | GOL §5-1513 | Lets someone manage your finances if you can’t |
| Health Care Proxy | Public Health Law Article 29-C | Lets someone make medical decisions for you |
You can learn how these fit together on our estate planning overview page.
Why People Set Up Trusts
Trusts solve real, practical problems. The most common reasons New Yorkers create one include:
- Avoiding probate. Probate is the court process of validating a will and settling an estate. Assets properly held in a trust generally pass to your beneficiaries without going through that process — saving time, cost, and privacy.
- Privacy. A will becomes a public court record; a trust generally does not.
- Control over timing. You can direct that a child receive funds at age 30 instead of all at once at 18, or provide for a beneficiary with special needs without disrupting their benefits.
- Planning for incapacity. If you become unable to manage your affairs, your successor trustee steps in smoothly — no court guardianship needed.
- Protecting certain assets and qualifying for long-term care. This is where things get nuanced, so let’s look at the two big categories of trusts.
The Two Main Types: Revocable vs. Irrevocable
Almost every trust falls into one of two buckets. Understanding the difference is the single most important concept on this page.
Revocable Living Trusts
A revocable trust is flexible. You can change it, amend it, or cancel (“revoke”) it entirely at any time while you’re alive and mentally capable. You typically remain the trustee and keep full control of the assets.
The trade-off for that flexibility: because you still control everything, the law still treats those assets as yours. A revocable trust is excellent for avoiding probate and planning for incapacity, but it does not shield your assets from your own creditors, lawsuits, or nursing-home costs. Learn more on our wills and trusts pages.
Irrevocable Trusts
An irrevocable trust is the opposite. Once you create it and transfer assets in, you generally cannot take them back or freely change the terms. You give up control — and in exchange, the law may stop treating those assets as yours.
Because of that, irrevocable trusts are the workhorses of legitimate asset protection in New York. The best-known example is the Medicaid Asset Protection Trust (MAPT), used to protect a home and savings while planning for long-term care.
A Crucial Truth About Asset Protection in New York
Here is something the internet often gets wrong, so read carefully.
New York does NOT allow self-settled domestic asset-protection trusts (DAPTs). In plain English: you cannot put your own money into a trust, keep the right to benefit from it yourself, and use that to hide those assets from your own creditors. A revocable or self-settled trust will not make your assets “creditor-proof.” Anyone promising you that in New York is misleading you.
What does work in New York are these legitimate, time-tested tools:
- Irrevocable trusts, including the Medicaid Asset Protection Trust — but note the five-year look-back: assets must generally be transferred into the trust at least five years before you apply for nursing-home Medicaid.
- LLCs and business entities to separate personal assets from business liability.
- ERISA-qualified retirement accounts, which carry strong protections.
- Adequate liability insurance and life insurance.
- Statutory exemptions under CPLR Article 52, including New York’s homestead exemption (CPLR §5206), which shields a portion of home equity.
For a deeper look, visit our asset protection page.
Timing Is Everything
Asset protection is something you do before trouble shows up — not after. Under New York’s Debtor and Creditor Law, transfers made to dodge an existing or clearly foreseeable creditor can be undone by a court as voidable (fraudulent) conveyances. Moving your house into a trust the week after a lawsuit lands on your desk doesn’t protect it; it can get reversed. Good planning is calm, early, and proactive.
Trusts and the New York Estate Tax (2026)
Trusts also play a role in tax planning. For 2026, New York’s estate tax has a basic exclusion amount of $7,350,000. But New York has an unusual feature called the “cliff.” If your taxable estate exceeds 105% of the exclusion — $7,717,500 — you lose the ENTIRE exemption, not just the amount over the line. The tax rate is progressive, ranging from 3% to 16%.
A few key points for beginners:
- New York has no gift tax, so lifetime gifting can reduce a taxable estate — but gifts made within three years of death are added back into the estate.
- Married couples can use trusts to make full use of both spouses’ exclusions.
- If your estate is anywhere near the cliff, planning is essential. See our New York estate tax guide and pair your trust with a properly drafted power of attorney.
How to Get Started — Without Feeling Overwhelmed
You do not need to understand every nuance before you begin. A good first step is simply a conversation. An experienced attorney will look at your family, your assets, and your goals, then recommend the right type of trust — or tell you honestly if you don’t need one yet.
The wrong trust, or a trust that’s never properly “funded” (assets retitled into it), can be worse than no trust at all. This is one area where doing it right matters.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need a trust if I already have a will?
Possibly. A will alone still goes through probate and only takes effect at death. A trust can avoid probate, protect privacy, and help during incapacity. Many New Yorkers benefit from having both, working together.
Will a revocable trust protect my house from a nursing home?
No. Because you keep control of a revocable trust, New York treats those assets as yours. For long-term care protection, an irrevocable Medicaid Asset Protection Trust is the appropriate tool — subject to the five-year look-back.
Can I protect my own assets from my own creditors with a trust?
Not in New York. The state does not permit self-settled domestic asset-protection trusts. Legitimate strategies involve irrevocable trusts, business entities, retirement accounts, insurance, and statutory exemptions — and they must be set up before a claim arises.
What happens if my estate is just over the New York exemption?
Be careful — New York’s cliff means an estate over $7,717,500 in 2026 loses the entire $7,350,000 exclusion. Trust and gifting strategies can help keep an estate below the cliff.
How do I know which trust is right for me?
That depends on your goals: probate avoidance, incapacity planning, Medicaid eligibility, or tax reduction. The best next step is a personalized consultation with attorney Russel Morgan, Esq.
Talk to Morgan Legal Group
Trusts don’t have to be intimidating. With the right guidance, they become a clear, powerful way to protect your family and your legacy across New York State. Schedule a consultation with attorney Russel Morgan, Esq.: Book your 30-minute consultation.
This article is for general informational purposes and is not legal advice. Laws change and every situation is different. Consult a qualified New York attorney about your specific circumstances.
Further reading from Morgan Legal Group: how trusts work in New York.