A trust is a legal arrangement in which a grantor transfers assets to a trustee to hold and manage for beneficiaries under written terms. In New York, the core benefit of a trust is that assets it owns pass outside probate — they are not part of the will-administered estate, so they avoid Surrogate’s Court delay and stay private. For Long Island homeowners whose largest asset is an appreciated single-family home, a properly funded trust can move that home out of probate entirely.

Definition — grantor: the person who creates and funds a trust (also called settlor or trustor). Definition — trustee: the person or institution that holds and manages trust assets. Definition — beneficiary: the person who benefits from the trust. Definition — corpus: the property held in the trust (the trust principal).

Revocable living trust vs. will

A revocable living trust can be changed or revoked during your lifetime; assets you retitle into it avoid probate while you keep full control.

Feature Will Revocable living trust
Avoids probate No Yes (for funded assets)
Privacy No — filed with the court Yes — private document
Control during life Full Full (you are usually trustee)
Effective At death Immediately upon funding
Asset protection None None while revocable

A revocable trust does not save estate tax and does not shield assets from creditors or Medicaid — its value is probate avoidance, privacy, and seamless incapacity management.

Irrevocable trusts and Medicaid asset protection

An irrevocable trust cannot be freely changed once created, and that is the point: by giving up control, the grantor can move assets out of their taxable estate or out of reach for Medicaid long-term-care eligibility. A Medicaid Asset Protection Trust (MAPT) is an irrevocable trust used so a Long Island home can be preserved for heirs while the owner qualifies for nursing-home Medicaid.

The key constraint is the 5-year lookback: transfers into a MAPT made within five years of a nursing-home Medicaid application can trigger a penalty period. This makes timing critical — a Suffolk homeowner who waits until a health crisis to plan has lost the lookback window.

Common trust types

Trust type Revocable? Primary use
Revocable living trust Yes Probate avoidance, incapacity
Irrevocable trust / MAPT No Medicaid, estate-tax reduction
Supplemental needs trust (EPTL 7-1.12) Varies Provide for a disabled beneficiary without losing benefits
Testamentary trust Created by will Trusts for minors or tax planning at death
Irrevocable life insurance trust (ILIT) No Keep life insurance out of the taxable estate

A supplemental (special) needs trust under EPTL 7-1.12 lets a Long Island family provide for a disabled child or relative without disqualifying them from Medicaid or SSI.

Why funding a trust matters

A trust controls only the assets actually titled in its name. An unfunded trust — signed but never used to retitle the deed and accounts — does nothing, and those assets still go through probate. Funding a Long Island revocable trust typically means recording a new deed transferring the home into the trust and retitling bank and brokerage accounts. Skipping this step is the single most common reason trusts fail to deliver probate avoidance.

Trustee duties under New York law

A trustee is a fiduciary. Under the prudent investor standard (EPTL 11-2.3), a trustee must invest and manage trust assets with care, skill, and diversification, acting solely in the beneficiaries’ interest. A trustee who self-deals or mismanages the corpus can be held personally liable.

Probate-avoidance value on Long Island

Because Long Island estates center on real property rather than Manhattan-style co-op shares, the probate-avoidance math is concrete: a deeded home in Massapequa, Huntington, or Sag Harbor that has appreciated for decades is exactly the kind of asset families do not want tied up in a Nassau or Suffolk Surrogate’s Court proceeding. A funded revocable trust lets the successor trustee transfer that home without filing a probate petition. Compare this with the probate process the same home would otherwise face, and review estate tax exposure for appreciated homes.

Frequently asked questions

Do I need a trust if I already have a will? Not necessarily, but a will alone does not avoid probate. A revocable living trust adds probate avoidance and privacy; a will still backstops anything left out of the trust.

Does a revocable trust protect my home from Medicaid? No. Only an irrevocable trust (such as a MAPT) can, and only if funded outside the 5-year lookback. A revocable trust offers no Medicaid or creditor protection.

Will a trust reduce my New York estate tax? A revocable trust will not. Irrevocable trusts and ILITs can remove assets from the taxable estate. See estate taxes.

What happens if I sign a trust but never fund it? The trust is empty and ineffective; assets left in your name still go through probate. Funding — retitling the deed and accounts — is essential.

This page is informational and not legal advice. To decide whether a trust fits your situation, book a consultation with Russel Morgan.

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