Protecting an Inheritance for Young or Spendthrift Heirs in New York

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Leaving money outright to an heir who is young, financially impulsive, or facing creditors can undo years of careful saving. New York law gives you tools to protect the gift — not by controlling your heir from beyond the grave, but by structuring how and when they receive it. Here is a practical checklist.

Why Outright Gifts Backfire

Under New York law, a child inherits outright at 18. A lump sum handed to an 18-year-old — or to an adult with a gambling habit, an unstable marriage, or aggressive creditors — is fully exposed. It can be spent, lost in divorce, or seized in a lawsuit within months. The fix is to interpose a trust between the asset and the heir.

Tool 1: A Trust With Staggered Distributions

You can create a trust (EPTL Article 7) that releases funds in stages — for example, income for support now, then portions of principal at set ages or milestones. A New York trustee manages investments and decides distributions according to your written standards (health, education, maintenance, support). For a spendthrift heir, you can give the trustee full discretion, so the heir never has an enforceable right to demand a check.

Tool 2: The Spendthrift Clause

New York permits spendthrift provisions that prevent a beneficiary from assigning their interest and shield trust assets from most creditors until distribution. Combined with discretionary distributions, this is the backbone of protecting an heir from their own decisions — or from people who would take advantage of them.

Tool 3: Supplemental Needs Trusts for Vulnerable Heirs

If an heir receives Medicaid or SSI, an outright inheritance can disqualify them from benefits. A supplemental needs trust under EPTL §7-1.12 lets you provide for quality-of-life expenses without counting as the beneficiary’s resource. This is essential for heirs with disabilities and is specific, technical drafting — not a template job.

Your Protection Checklist

  • Decide the trigger: ages, milestones (graduation, home purchase), or pure trustee discretion.
  • Choose a trustee who is financially capable and willing to say no — a trusted individual, a New York professional, or a corporate trustee.
  • Add a spendthrift clause to block creditors and assignment.
  • Use an EPTL §7-1.12 supplemental needs trust if any heir is disabled or on means-tested benefits.
  • Name a successor trustee so the structure survives the first trustee.
  • Coordinate beneficiary designations — name the trust, not the heir directly, on accounts you want protected.

Choosing the Trustee Matters Most

The best-drafted trust fails with the wrong trustee. For a spendthrift or young heir, neutrality and backbone matter more than family closeness. Many New York families pair a relative who knows the heir with a professional co-trustee who handles money and absorbs the pressure of declining unreasonable requests.

Consult a New York attorney. Protecting an inheritance is about precise drafting — distribution standards, spendthrift language, and benefit-sensitive provisions. A New York estate planning attorney can tailor a trust to your heir’s specific situation under EPTL Article 7.

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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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