A trust is a legal arrangement in which a trustee holds and manages assets for beneficiaries under terms you set. In New York, the core benefit of a revocable living trust is probate avoidance: assets titled to the trust pass to your beneficiaries without going through the Kings County Surrogate’s Court — keeping the transfer private, faster, and out of public record. For Brooklyn homeowners whose brownstones have appreciated into seven figures, a trust is often the single most useful planning tool.

Trusts in New York are governed by the EPTL (Article 7 in particular). Below is how the main types work, when each makes sense, and the funding mistake that quietly defeats them.

Why a Brooklyn homeowner considers a trust

Probate in high-volume Kings County is not fast. An appreciated Bay Ridge multi-family or a Brooklyn Heights co-op can sit in probate for over a year while distributees are notified and the will is proved. A revocable living trust sidesteps that: title is already in the trust, so the successor trustee can transfer or sell the home immediately. Privacy matters too — probate filings at 2 Johnson Street are public; a trust keeps your beneficiaries and your home’s value off the docket.

Revocable living trust vs. will

Feature Will Revocable living trust
Avoids probate No Yes (for funded assets)
Privacy Public court filing Private
Effective At death During life and after
Incapacity coverage No Yes (successor trustee steps in)
Cost to set up Lower Higher upfront
Revocable Yes, until death Yes, anytime while competent
Court oversight Surrogate’s Court None unless disputed

A will still matters — a pour-over will captures anything you forgot to retitle into the trust.

Irrevocable trusts and Medicaid Asset Protection Trusts

Definition — Irrevocable trust: A trust you generally cannot amend or revoke after creation; in exchange, the assets may be shielded from estate tax or long-term-care costs.

A Medicaid Asset Protection Trust (MAPT) is an irrevocable trust used to protect a home and savings from nursing-home spend-down. New York imposes a five-year lookback for institutional Medicaid: assets transferred into a MAPT must generally be there five years before nursing-home Medicaid is sought. For an aging Brooklyn homeowner whose main asset is a long-held house in Flatbush or Bensonhurst, a MAPT can preserve that home for the next generation — but only if set up early. (Note: New York’s community-based Medicaid lookback rules have shifted in recent years — verify current lookback timing for home-care benefits.)

Trust types at a glance

Trust type Key feature Common Brooklyn use
Revocable living trust Avoids probate, fully flexible Holding an appreciated brownstone or co-op
Irrevocable trust Asset/estate-tax protection Reducing taxable estate
Medicaid Asset Protection Trust Shields home from spend-down Long-term-care planning
Supplemental Needs Trust (EPTL 7-1.12) Benefits a disabled beneficiary without losing public benefits Providing for a special-needs heir
Testamentary trust Created by your will, funded at death Managing assets for minor children

Definition — Supplemental Needs Trust (SNT): Authorized by EPTL 7-1.12, an SNT lets you provide for a disabled loved one while preserving their Medicaid and SSI eligibility.

Funding the trust — the step that makes or breaks it

Definition — Funding: Retitling assets into the name of the trust. An unfunded trust controls nothing.

The most common, costly mistake is signing a trust and never transferring assets into it. To fund a trust, you record a new deed moving your Brooklyn home into the trust, retitle bank and brokerage accounts, and update beneficiary forms where appropriate. An empty revocable trust offers zero probate avoidance — the home still goes through the Kings County Surrogate’s Court. Co-op shares require board cooperation to retitle (see below).

Trustee duties under NY law (EPTL 11-2.3)

A trustee is a fiduciary. Under EPTL 11-2.3, the Prudent Investor Act, a trustee must invest and manage trust assets with reasonable care, diversify, and act solely in the beneficiaries’ interest. A trustee who self-deals or invests recklessly can be held personally liable. Choose a successor trustee you trust to handle a valuable Brooklyn property and possible co-op politics.

The Brooklyn angle: co-ops, condos, and brownstones

Brooklyn title comes in distinct flavors, and each affects trust planning:

  • Brownstones and townhouses (Park Slope, Bed-Stuy, Crown Heights) are real property — transferred by deed into a trust, with a recorded deed.
  • Condos are also real property and retitle by deed.
  • Co-ops (common in Brooklyn Heights) are shares plus a proprietary lease, not real property. Moving co-op shares into a trust requires the co-op board’s approval, and EPTL 7-1.12 contemplates trusts holding co-op shares. Start early — board approval can take months.

Definition quick reference

Grantor (settlor): The person who creates and funds the trust. Trustee: The person or institution managing the trust. Beneficiary: Who benefits from the trust. Corpus: The property held in the trust (the trust principal).

Frequently asked questions

Do I need a trust if I only own one home in Brooklyn? Often yes — a revocable trust keeps that single appreciated home out of probate and lets a successor trustee act immediately, which is valuable given Kings County timelines.

Does a revocable trust reduce my estate taxes? No. A revocable trust avoids probate but does not remove assets from your taxable estate. For tax reduction, an irrevocable trust is required. See estate taxes.

Can a trust hold my Brooklyn co-op? Yes, with board approval, under EPTL 7-1.12. The shares and proprietary lease are retitled to the trust.

What happens to a trust if it is never funded? Nothing passes through it — the assets you forgot to retitle go through probate under your will.

See whether a trust fits your plan

A consultation can tell you quickly whether a revocable trust, a MAPT, or simply a well-drafted will is right for your Brooklyn estate. Book 30 minutes with Russel Morgan.

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