Irrevocable Trusts in New York

Irrevocable trusts are the workhorses of advanced estate planning — from Medicaid asset protection and special needs planning to estate tax minimization and creditor protection. Morgan Legal Group designs irrevocable trust solutions for every stage of life and every level of wealth across New York City and beyond.

The Power and Purpose of Irrevocable Trusts in New York

When most people think of estate planning, they think of a will or a revocable living trust — documents that can be changed at any time during the grantor's lifetime. But the revocable trust, while essential, offers a limited range of protective benefits: assets in a revocable trust are still subject to estate tax, accessible to creditors, and counted as available resources for Medicaid purposes. Irrevocable trusts, by contrast, remove assets from the grantor's legal ownership — and in doing so, provide protections that revocable documents simply cannot.

Russel Morgan, Esq. and the Morgan Legal Group team design irrevocable trust structures for New York clients across the full spectrum of planning needs. For families with aging parents, Medicaid asset protection trusts (MAPTs) can preserve the family home and other assets from the catastrophic cost of nursing home care. For families with children who have disabilities, supplemental needs trusts ensure that inheritances enhance — rather than disqualify — government benefit eligibility. For high-net-worth families, irrevocable trusts ranging from credit shelter trusts to GRATs, SLATs, ILITs, and dynasty trusts form the core of a comprehensive tax minimization strategy.

Each type of irrevocable trust involves trade-offs — principally the loss of direct control over the transferred assets — that must be understood and accepted before moving forward. Morgan Legal Group provides clear, honest counsel on these trade-offs and ensures that each client fully understands what they are gaining and what they are giving up before any irrevocable trust is executed. Serving New York families across Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, the Bronx, Staten Island, Nassau, Westchester, and Suffolk counties.

Irrevocable Trust Structures We Draft

Irrevocable Trusts — Your Questions Answered

What is an irrevocable trust and how is it different from a revocable trust in New York?
An irrevocable trust is a trust that, once created and funded, generally cannot be modified, amended, or revoked by the grantor without the consent of the beneficiaries and, in some cases, court approval. This is the fundamental distinction from a revocable living trust, which can be changed or revoked by the grantor at any time. The permanence of an irrevocable trust is the feature that makes it valuable: because the grantor has relinquished control and ownership, assets are generally not included in the grantor's taxable estate, are not accessible to the grantor's creditors, and — if structured properly — are not counted as available resources for Medicaid eligibility. New York courts do allow for modification of irrevocable trusts in limited circumstances through judicial modification under EPTL §7-1.9, and New York also recognizes 'decanting,' which allows a trustee to pour the assets of one irrevocable trust into a new trust with more favorable terms. Russel Morgan advises New York clients on the full range of irrevocable trust structures and their specific applications across estate tax planning, asset protection, Medicaid planning, and special needs planning.
What is a Medicaid asset protection trust in New York?
A Medicaid asset protection trust (MAPT) is an irrevocable trust designed to protect the grantor's assets from being counted as available resources for Medicaid eligibility purposes, specifically for long-term care (nursing home Medicaid). In New York, long-term care Medicaid requires applicants to have minimal countable assets — typically $30,182 or less for an individual (2024). Assets transferred to a MAPT are removed from the grantor's countable resources, but only after the applicable look-back period expires. New York Nursing Home Medicaid has a 60-month (5-year) look-back period. The MAPT is typically structured so that the grantor retains the right to receive income from the trust assets and to live in the home if transferred, but has no right to the principal — a critical distinction for Medicaid purposes. Russel Morgan designs MAPTs for New York clients across all five boroughs and surrounding counties, coordinating with elder law planning to protect family assets from the catastrophic cost of long-term care.
What is a supplemental needs trust in New York?
A supplemental needs trust (SNT) is an irrevocable trust designed to provide for the supplemental care and quality of life of a beneficiary with a disability without disqualifying the beneficiary from government benefits programs such as Medicaid and Supplemental Security Income (SSI). New York recognizes both first-party SNTs (funded with the disabled person's own assets) and third-party SNTs (funded with assets belonging to parents, grandparents, or other family members). A third-party SNT is the most common vehicle in estate planning for parents of children with disabilities: instead of leaving assets outright to the disabled child — which would disqualify the child from Medicaid and SSI — the parent leaves assets to the supplemental needs trust. Third-party SNTs are not subject to Medicaid payback requirements at the beneficiary's death. First-party SNTs, by contrast, are subject to a payback provision requiring that Medicaid be reimbursed for benefits paid during the beneficiary's lifetime. Morgan Legal Group drafts SNTs for New York families across all five boroughs and surrounding counties.
What is a credit shelter trust and is it still relevant for New York estates?
A credit shelter trust is an irrevocable trust established at the death of the first spouse, funded with assets up to the applicable estate tax exemption, designed to 'shelter' those assets from estate tax at the surviving spouse's death. The introduction of federal 'portability' in 2010 changed the federal planning calculus by allowing a surviving spouse to inherit the deceased spouse's unused federal exemption. However, New York does not recognize portability for New York estate tax purposes — meaning that if the first spouse to die does not use their New York estate tax exemption, it is lost forever. For New York married couples with combined estates above the New York exemption ($6.94 million in 2024), a credit shelter trust funded at the first death continues to be an important planning tool that saves substantial New York estate tax at the surviving spouse's death. Morgan Legal Group designs credit shelter trust provisions for New York married couples as part of coordinated estate plans that address both federal and New York estate tax objectives.

Related Estate Planning Topics

Additional resources: morganlegalny.com — Estate Planning Overview

Schedule Your Irrevocable Trust Consultation

Russel Morgan, Esq. helps New York families use irrevocable trusts to protect assets, minimize taxes, and plan for every stage of life. Serving all five boroughs and surrounding counties.

Schedule a Consultation
(212) 561-4299888-LAW-1315contact@morganlegalgroup.com