Protecting an Inheritance for Young or Spendthrift Heirs

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Leaving money to someone is easy. Leaving it in a way that actually helps them is harder. A lump sum handed to a young adult, a financially impulsive relative, or an heir with creditors can disappear fast. For Brooklyn families, New York trust law offers practical tools to protect an inheritance. Here is the checklist.

The problem with an outright gift

An outright inheritance is the heir’s the moment it lands, with no guardrails. A 22-year-old in Brooklyn who suddenly receives a large sum may spend it quickly. An heir going through a divorce or facing creditors may lose it to others. And an heir who receives government benefits can be disqualified by a single deposit.

Tool 1: A trust instead of a direct bequest

Rather than naming the heir directly, leave their share in a trust (EPTL Article 7) with a trustee who manages and distributes funds according to your instructions. You stay in control of how and when the money is used, even after you are gone.

Tool 2: Staggered and age-based distributions

You can direct the trustee to release funds in stages, for example portions at certain ages or milestones, rather than all at once. This gives a young heir time to mature and reduces the damage a single bad decision can do.

Tool 3: Spendthrift protection

A spendthrift provision restricts the heir from assigning or pledging their interest before distribution and limits creditors’ ability to reach trust assets while they remain in trust. For an heir with debt problems or a shaky financial track record, this is a meaningful shield.

Tool 4: A discretionary standard

Giving the trustee discretion, for instance to pay for health, education, maintenance, and support, lets the trustee respond to real needs while withholding cash that would be wasted. Choose a trustee you trust to exercise judgment, or consider a professional trustee for larger sums.

Tool 5: Supplemental needs trusts for disabled heirs

If an heir receives needs-based government benefits, an outright inheritance can disqualify them. A supplemental needs trust (EPTL §7-1.12) lets the funds enhance their quality of life without replacing or destroying eligibility for those benefits. This is one of the most important protections a Brooklyn family can put in place for a loved one with a disability.

Putting it together

  • Decide which heirs need protection and why, age, spending habits, creditors, benefits.
  • Choose a capable, trustworthy trustee, and name a backup.
  • Set distribution rules: staggered ages, discretionary standards, or both.
  • Add spendthrift language where appropriate.
  • Use an EPTL §7-1.12 supplemental needs trust for a disabled heir.
  • Coordinate beneficiary designations so they do not bypass the trust.

Consult a New York attorney

Protective trust planning must be drafted precisely to work under New York law and to fit your family. Speak with a licensed New York estate planning attorney serving Brooklyn to build protections suited to your heirs. This article is general information, not legal advice.

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DISCLAIMER: The information provided in this blog is for informational purposes only and should not be considered legal advice. The content of this blog may not reflect the most current legal developments. No attorney-client relationship is formed by reading this blog or contacting Morgan Legal Group PLLP.

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