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Most New Yorkers ask the same first question: what does a trust really cost, and how long does it take? At Morgan Legal Group, attorney Russel Morgan, Esq. answers that question for clients across New York State — from Brooklyn and Long Island to Westchester, the Hudson Valley, and Upstate. This page cuts through the legal jargon and gives you the practical picture.

Why the Choice of Trust Type Changes Everything

New York trusts are governed by EPTL Article 7. Within that framework, the trust type you choose determines your costs, your timeline, and what you actually protect.

Trust Type Amendable? Avoids Probate Reduces Estate Tax Medicaid Protection
Revocable Living Trust Yes Yes No No
Irrevocable Trust Generally no Yes Yes Yes (5-yr look-back)
Special Needs Trust (SNT) Varies Yes No Preserves benefits

Key reality check: A revocable living trust keeps you in full control — you can amend or revoke it at any time — but because you retain that control, the assets remain inside your taxable estate. It will not reduce your New York estate tax bill.

An irrevocable trust surrenders that flexibility in exchange for tax and asset-protection benefits. For 2026, New York’s basic exclusion is $7,350,000. Estates exceeding 105% of that figure — the “cliff” at $7,717,500 — lose the entire exemption, not just the overage. That cliff makes early irrevocable trust planning especially high-stakes for New Yorkers with growing estates.

What Does Trust Administration Actually Cost?

There is no single price list, but there are anchors:

For Special Needs Trusts, the benefit calculation is different: protecting a disabled beneficiary’s Medicaid and SSI eligibility under EPTL 7-1.12 can be worth far more than the drafting cost over a lifetime.

The Trustee’s Obligations Under New York Law

Whoever serves as trustee — a family member, a professional, or a corporate fiduciary — is bound by EPTL Article 11-A’s prudent-investor standard, plus the duty of loyalty and the duty to account to beneficiaries. Failing those duties exposes a trustee to personal liability. Trust administration is not a clerical role; it is a fiduciary one.

Trust vs. Will: The Probate Question

A will is public record and must be admitted to Surrogate’s Court before a dollar moves. A trust is private and transfers assets outside probate entirely. See our full trust vs. will comparison for a side-by-side breakdown, and our trusts overview for a broader look at the New York planning landscape.


Ready to see which trust fits your situation — and what it will cost? Schedule a consultation with Russel Morgan, Esq.: Book a 30-minute call.

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