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Trust vs. Will in New York: The Key Differences

If you are just starting to think about your estate plan, here is the short answer: in New York, a will is a document that takes effect only after you die and must go through probate in the Surrogate’s Court (a public process), while a trust is a legal arrangement that can take effect during your lifetime, can avoid probate, and keeps your affairs private. Most well-rounded plans use both — but understanding what each one does is the first step. This guide breaks down the essentials in plain language, so you can feel confident about your next move.

You do not need to be wealthy or have a complicated life to benefit from understanding these tools. Whether you own a home, want to protect a loved one, or simply want to spare your family unnecessary court time, the basics below are for you.

The 30-Second Summary

Feature Will Trust
When it takes effect After death only During life (and after)
Goes through probate? Yes — Surrogate’s Court No (for assets titled in the trust)
Public or private? Public record Private
Manages incapacity? No Yes (revocable trust)
Names guardians for minor children? Yes No
Can be changed? Yes, while living Depends (revocable yes; irrevocable generally no)

As you can see, these tools do different jobs. A will is unmatched for naming a guardian for your minor children. A trust shines at avoiding probate, protecting privacy, and planning for incapacity. Let’s look closer.

What a Will Does in New York

A will is your written instructions for who receives your property after you pass away. When you die, your will must be filed with the Surrogate’s Court in the county where you lived, and the court oversees a process called probate. Probate confirms the will is valid, appoints your executor, and supervises the distribution of your estate.

Probate has real benefits — court oversight can resolve disputes — but it comes with trade-offs:

  • It is public. Anyone can request to see a probated will and learn who inherited what.
  • It takes time. The process involves notifying heirs, settling debts, and court filings.
  • It only controls probate assets. Property with named beneficiaries (like life insurance) passes outside the will.

A will is also the only place where you can name a guardian for your minor children — something no trust can do. For many New York families, this alone makes a will essential.

To compare these tools side by side, see our overview at /trust-vs-will/.

What a Trust Does in New York

Trusts in New York are governed by the Estates, Powers and Trusts Law (EPTL) Article 7. A trust is a legal arrangement where a person (the trustee) holds and manages property for the benefit of someone else (the beneficiary), according to the rules you set. When you “fund” a trust by retitling assets into it, those assets can pass to your loved ones without probate — privately and often more smoothly.

There are several kinds of trusts, but here are the essentials.

Revocable Living Trust

A revocable living trust is the most common starting point. As the grantor, you keep full control: you can amend it, change beneficiaries, or revoke it entirely while you are alive and competent.

Its core benefits are:

  • Avoiding probate for assets titled in the trust.
  • Privacy, since the trust is not filed publicly.
  • Incapacity management — if you become unable to handle your affairs, your successor trustee steps in without a court guardianship proceeding.

One honest, essential point: a revocable trust does not save estate tax. Because you keep control, the assets remain part of your taxable estate. Its value is in convenience, privacy, and control — not tax savings. Learn more at /revocable-living-trust/.

Irrevocable Trust

An irrevocable trust generally cannot be amended or revoked once created. In exchange for giving up that control, you gain powerful planning tools. Irrevocable trusts are used for:

  • Estate-tax reduction, by removing assets from your taxable estate.
  • Asset protection from certain future creditors.
  • Medicaid planning — but note the 5-year look-back period. Transfers into the trust within five years of applying for long-term-care Medicaid can trigger a penalty.

Because these trusts are permanent, they require careful, professional guidance. See /irrevocable-trust/ for details.

Supplemental (Special) Needs Trust

A Supplemental Needs Trust (SNT), authorized under EPTL 7-1.12, lets you provide for a loved one with disabilities without disqualifying them from means-tested public benefits like Medicaid or SSI. The trust supplements — rather than replaces — the support those programs provide, preserving both. This is one of the most compassionate and important planning tools available to New York families. Learn more at /special-needs-trust/.

The Trustee’s Job: Duties You Should Know

Whoever serves as trustee takes on serious legal responsibilities, called fiduciary duties. In New York, a trustee must follow the prudent-investor standard under EPTL Article 11-A, meaning they must invest and manage trust assets sensibly. A trustee also owes a duty of loyalty (acting in the beneficiaries’ best interests, not their own) and a duty to account (keeping records and reporting to beneficiaries).

Trustees may be entitled to commissions under the schedules set out in New York’s SCPA and EPTL — choosing the right trustee matters. Proper guidance during this process is the focus of /trust-administration/.

What About Estate Taxes in New York?

Estate tax is a key reason some families consider trusts. For 2026, New York’s basic exclusion amount is $7,350,000 — estates below this generally owe no New York estate tax.

But New York has a feature first-timers should know about: the “cliff.” If your taxable estate exceeds 105% of the exclusion — $7,717,500 in 2026 — you lose the entire exemption, and the whole estate becomes taxable, not just the amount over the threshold. For estates approaching this line, planning (often with an irrevocable trust) can make a meaningful difference. To explore the full range of options, visit /trusts-overview/.

So, Which One Do You Need?

For most New Yorkers, the question is not “trust or will” — it is how to use them together. A common essentials plan includes:

  • A will to name guardians for children and serve as a backstop for any assets not in your trust.
  • A revocable living trust to avoid probate, protect privacy, and plan for incapacity.
  • Specialized trusts (irrevocable or special needs) when tax, asset protection, or a loved one’s benefits are involved.

The right mix depends on your family, your assets, and your goals. That is exactly what a planning conversation is for.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I still need a will if I have a trust?
Yes. A will names guardians for minor children and acts as a safety net — through a “pour-over” provision — for any assets you did not transfer into your trust during your lifetime.

Does a revocable living trust lower my New York estate tax?
No. Because you keep control of a revocable trust, its assets remain in your taxable estate. Estate-tax reduction generally requires an irrevocable trust.

What is the 5-year look-back?
For long-term-care Medicaid, New York reviews asset transfers — including those into an irrevocable trust — made within five years before you apply. Such transfers can create a penalty period, so timing matters.

Will a trust keep my affairs private?
Yes. Unlike a will, which becomes a public record once probated in the Surrogate’s Court, a properly funded trust is not filed publicly, keeping your wishes and your beneficiaries private.

Take the Next Step With Confidence

Understanding the difference between a trust and a will is the foundation of a strong estate plan — and you do not have to navigate it alone. At Morgan Legal Group, Russel Morgan, Esq. and our team help New York families build clear, reassuring plans tailored to their goals.

Schedule your consultation with Russel Morgan, Esq. →

Further reading from Morgan Legal Group: New York estate planning.

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