Special Needs Trusts in New York: Protecting Your Loved One Without Jeopardizing Their Benefits
For families with a loved one who has a physical or intellectual disability, the question is not simply how to leave an inheritance — it is how to leave one without inadvertently destroying the government benefits that sustain daily life. A properly drafted Special Needs Trust in New York answers that challenge with precision.
What Is a Special Needs Trust and Why Does It Matter in New York?
A Special Needs Trust (SNT) — also called a Supplemental Needs Trust under New York law — is a specific legal arrangement that holds assets for the benefit of a person with a disability while preserving that individual's eligibility for means-tested government programs such as Medicaid and Supplemental Security Income (SSI). These programs have strict resource limits: in 2026, an SSI recipient may own no more than $2,000 in countable resources. A direct inheritance or outright gift that pushes assets above that threshold can trigger disqualification, leaving a vulnerable person without essential medical coverage or income support.
The SNT works by legally separating ownership from benefit. The trust owns the assets; the beneficiary does not. Because the assets are not in the beneficiary's name and because the beneficiary has no direct access to demand distributions, Medicaid and the Social Security Administration treat the trust corpus as unavailable for eligibility purposes — provided the trust is drafted according to very specific statutory requirements.
New York's approach to SNTs is governed by federal law (42 U.S.C. § 1396p), the Social Security Act, and state-level guidance from the New York State Department of Health. Getting the language exactly right is not optional; even minor drafting errors can expose the trust to disqualification or require costly correction through the courts.
First-Party vs. Third-Party Special Needs Trusts: The Critical Distinction
The first decision any family must make is which type of SNT applies to their situation. New York recognizes two principal categories, and they operate under materially different rules.
First-Party SNTs (d4A Trusts)
A first-party SNT, authorized by 42 U.S.C. § 1396p(d)(4)(A), is funded with the beneficiary's own assets — money that legally belongs to the disabled person. Common funding sources include a personal injury settlement, an inheritance received directly before the trust was established, or savings accumulated before the onset of a disability. The individual must be under age 65 at the time the trust is created, and the trust must be established by a parent, grandparent, guardian, or a court.
The defining characteristic of the first-party SNT is its Medicaid payback requirement. Upon the beneficiary's death, New York State Medicaid is entitled to reimbursement for all medical assistance paid on the beneficiary's behalf during their lifetime, dollar for dollar, before any remaining assets pass to heirs. This payback obligation is non-negotiable and is the price paid for preserving Medicaid eligibility on assets the beneficiary already owned.
Third-Party SNTs
A third-party SNT is funded with assets belonging to someone other than the beneficiary — typically a parent, grandparent, or sibling who wants to provide for a loved one with a disability. Because the beneficiary never owned the funds, there is no Medicaid payback requirement. Upon the beneficiary's death, the remaining trust assets can pass to other family members, charitable organizations, or whomever the settlor designates.
Third-party SNTs are the preferred planning vehicle for families doing proactive estate planning. They can be created as standalone trusts or embedded directly within a will as a testamentary trust. For larger families with multiple potential beneficiaries, a pooled third-party SNT administered by a nonprofit organization is also an option worth exploring with counsel.
Key Rule: Never leave assets directly to a person with a disability in your will or as a beneficiary designation on a retirement account or life insurance policy. Redirect those assets to a properly drafted third-party Special Needs Trust instead. A direct bequest, however well-intentioned, can eliminate government benefit eligibility immediately.
What Can a Special Needs Trust Pay For in New York?
The SNT is designed to supplement, not replace, government benefits. Distributions must cover goods and services that Medicaid and SSI do not provide — enhancing the beneficiary's quality of life without triggering benefit reductions. In practice, permissible distributions commonly include:
- Education, tutoring, and vocational training
- Computers, tablets, and assistive technology
- Recreational activities, cultural events, and travel
- Clothing, furniture, and personal care items
- Companion animals and related veterinary costs
- Private therapy beyond what Medicaid covers
- Communication devices and specialized equipment
- Legal and financial management fees
Distributions that could reduce SSI or trigger Medicaid complications require careful management. Cash distributions directly to the beneficiary are almost always problematic and should be avoided. Payments for food and shelter — the categories SSI calls "in-kind support and maintenance" — can reduce the SSI payment by up to one-third plus $20 per month. A knowledgeable trustee understands these rules and structures distributions accordingly.
Choosing the Right Trustee for a New York SNT
Selecting the trustee is one of the most consequential decisions in special needs planning. The trustee holds significant discretionary power over the beneficiary's financial life and must navigate an intricate web of federal benefit rules, New York tax law, and investment prudence standards — year after year, potentially for decades.
Many families choose an individual trustee — often a sibling or close relative — for their personal knowledge of the beneficiary's needs. This has real advantages in terms of responsiveness and relationship, but it also carries risk: individual trustees may lack legal expertise, face personal crises, or predecease the beneficiary. For this reason, co-trusteeship arrangements pairing a family member with a professional trustee (an attorney, bank trust department, or nonprofit organization) are often the most robust solution.
For families without a suitable family trustee, New York has a number of established nonprofit organizations that serve as pooled trust managers, including NYSARC Trust Services and Volunteers of America. These organizations pool assets from many SNT beneficiaries for investment purposes while maintaining separate accounting for each individual — a cost-effective option for smaller trusts.
New York law also requires that the trustee file annual accounts or obtain a waiver, and that the trust terminate under defined circumstances (such as death of the beneficiary or, for first-party trusts, when benefits are no longer needed). An experienced New York estate planning attorney can draft trustee succession provisions that prevent gaps in administration if a trustee becomes unable to serve.
Integrating the SNT Into Your Broader Estate Plan
A Special Needs Trust rarely exists in isolation. It must be thoughtfully integrated with every other estate planning instrument in the family's portfolio. This means reviewing — and often revising — the following:
- Wills and revocable trusts: Provisions that would otherwise distribute assets directly to a disabled child must be redirected to the SNT.
- Beneficiary designations: IRAs, 401(k)s, life insurance policies, and annuities commonly pass outside the will. Each must be reviewed and, where appropriate, name the SNT as beneficiary.
- Joint ownership: Real property or bank accounts held jointly with a disabled person can create Medicaid complications. Ownership structures should be reviewed.
- ABLE accounts: New York participates in the Achieving a Better Life Experience (ABLE) program, which allows persons with disabilities to hold up to $100,000 tax-advantaged without affecting SSI eligibility. ABLE accounts complement but do not replace SNTs for larger amounts.
For comprehensive guidance on the full range of trusts and estate planning strategies available to your family, our Special Needs Trust practice page provides detailed information. Families planning for elder care alongside special needs planning should also review our Elder Law services, which address the intersection of Medicaid planning and disability planning for aging family members.
Common Mistakes Families Make — and How to Avoid Them
Even well-meaning families make errors that undermine the purpose of a Special Needs Trust. The most common pitfalls in New York include:
- Using a generic trust template: Online forms and boilerplate documents do not satisfy the specific language requirements under New York State Medicaid regulations. A trust that fails these requirements will not protect eligibility.
- Failing to notify the trustee of distributions: A trustee who makes cash distributions directly to the beneficiary — even for legitimate purposes — may trigger an SSI overpayment determination that requires repayment to the Social Security Administration.
- Overlooking retirement account beneficiary designations: Naming an SNT beneficiary on an inherited IRA requires specific trust language to comply with SECURE Act rules governing the 10-year payout period. This requires coordination between tax counsel and the estate planning attorney.
- Failing to fund the trust during life: A testamentary SNT (one created in a will) does not exist until the testator dies. For immediate planning needs, a standalone inter vivos trust must be created and funded now.
- Ignoring regular review: Federal and state benefit rules, tax law, and family circumstances change. An SNT should be reviewed at least every three to five years — more frequently if major changes occur.
Note on Pooled Trusts: New York also has a network of approved nonprofit organizations that administer pooled supplemental needs trusts under 42 U.S.C. § 1396p(d)(4)(C). These can be appropriate for individuals who need a trust established quickly (such as during a Medicaid application) or whose trust corpus is modest. They are not a substitute for individualized planning in complex family situations.
Taking the Next Step: Working With a New York Special Needs Trust Attorney
Establishing a Special Needs Trust is one of the most important financial decisions a family can make for a loved one with a disability. Done correctly, it provides a lifetime of supplemental support without sacrificing the government benefits that pay for essential care. Done incorrectly, it can expose the beneficiary to disqualification from Medicaid, demand letters from the Social Security Administration, and the need for costly court proceedings to correct errors.
At Morgan Legal Group, P.C., attorney Russel Morgan has guided New York families through the full spectrum of special needs planning, from straightforward third-party SNTs embedded in a will to complex multi-asset strategies involving ABLE accounts, pooled trusts, and coordinated Medicaid planning. Our office is located at 15 Maiden Lane, Suite 905, in Lower Manhattan — convenient to families throughout the five boroughs and the greater New York metropolitan area.
For additional information about New York estate planning law and Special Needs Trusts, we also recommend reviewing resources available at Morgan Legal NY's Wills & Trusts resource page.
Schedule a Special Needs Trust Consultation
Protect your loved one's benefits and future. Speak with Russel Morgan, Esq. about creating a compliant, comprehensive Special Needs Trust tailored to your family's needs.
Request a Free Consultation Or call us directly: (212) 561-4299