Most estate-planning decisions in New York come down to a single tension: how much control are you willing to give up in exchange for protection? An irrevocable trust sits at the far end of that spectrum. You surrender the ability to freely amend or revoke the arrangement — and in return you gain tools that a revocable trust and a will simply cannot offer: estate-tax reduction, creditor protection, and eligibility planning for Medicaid.
This page approaches the irrevocable trust as a comparison. Rather than describing it in isolation, we weigh it against the two alternatives most New Yorkers actually consider — the revocable living trust and the last will and testament — so you can see exactly what an irrevocable trust buys you and what it costs you. New York trusts of every kind are governed by the Estates, Powers and Trusts Law (EPTL) Article 7, and the distinctions below all flow from that framework.
If you are still mapping out which structure fits your family, our trusts overview is the best starting point, and trust vs. will breaks down the probate question in detail.
What “Irrevocable” Actually Means in New York
An irrevocable trust is one the grantor generally cannot amend, revoke, or unwind at will after it is created and funded. That permanence is not a flaw — it is the entire point. Because you no longer own or control the assets the way you once did, the law treats those assets differently for tax, creditor, and benefits purposes.
Contrast this with a revocable living trust, where the grantor keeps full control: you can amend it, revoke it, swap trustees, or pull assets back out whenever you like. That flexibility is wonderful for managing incapacity and avoiding probate — but it comes at a price. Because you retain control, the assets remain part of your taxable estate and remain reachable by your creditors. A revocable trust does not save estate tax. An irrevocable trust can.
The grantor of an irrevocable trust typically must work through a trustee, follow the trust’s terms, and accept that beneficiaries — not the grantor alone — now have enforceable rights. New York permits considerable customization within those bounds, but the core bargain stays fixed: protection in exchange for control.
The Three Options Side by Side
The fastest way to understand where an irrevocable trust fits is to line it up against the alternatives.
| Feature | Will | Revocable Living Trust | Irrevocable Trust |
|---|---|---|---|
| Grantor keeps control / can amend | N/A (takes effect at death) | Yes — fully amendable | No — generally permanent |
| Avoids Surrogate’s Court probate | No — must be probated | Yes | Yes |
| Private (not public record) | No — public on probate | Yes | Yes |
| Reduces NY estate tax | No | No | Yes — assets removed from taxable estate |
| Asset / creditor protection | No | No | Yes |
| Medicaid planning (5-year look-back) | No | No | Yes — when properly structured |
| Manages incapacity during life | No | Yes | Yes |
Read the table top to bottom and a pattern emerges. A will is public, must be probated in the Surrogate’s Court, and offers no tax, creditor, or benefits advantages — it simply directs who receives what. A revocable trust fixes the probate and privacy problems and manages incapacity, but stops there. An irrevocable trust is the only structure in the column that delivers estate-tax reduction, asset protection, and Medicaid planning — and it pays for those advantages with permanence.
When an Irrevocable Trust Is Worth the Trade
Giving up control is a serious decision. Here is when it tends to be justified:
- Estate-tax exposure. For 2026, New York’s basic exclusion amount is $7,350,000. The state’s estate tax also features a cliff at 105% of that figure — $7,717,500. An estate that crosses the cliff does not merely pay tax on the excess; it loses the entire exemption and is taxed from the first dollar. Moving assets into an irrevocable trust removes them from your taxable estate, which can keep an estate below the exclusion or the cliff entirely. For families near these thresholds, the math can be dramatic.
- Asset protection. Because you no longer own the assets outright, properly structured irrevocable-trust property is generally shielded from your future creditors and lawsuits in a way that revocable-trust and probate assets are not.
- Medicaid planning. Long-term care in New York is expensive, and Medicaid is means-tested. An irrevocable trust can hold assets so they no longer count against eligibility — but only subject to the five-year look-back period. Transfers made within five years of applying for nursing-home Medicaid can trigger a penalty, which is why timing and early planning matter so much. This is the heart of trust administration and funding strategy done right.
If none of these three pressures applies to you — your estate is comfortably under the exclusion, you have no creditor or long-term-care concerns — then a revocable trust usually delivers the benefits you want (probate avoidance, privacy, incapacity management) without the permanence. The comparison is the decision.
A Note on Special Needs Beneficiaries
One irrevocable structure deserves separate mention because it solves a problem no other tool can: the supplemental needs trust, sometimes called a special needs trust (SNT), authorized under EPTL 7-1.12. A direct inheritance — through a will or an outright gift — can disqualify a disabled beneficiary from means-tested benefits like Medicaid and SSI. An SNT lets you provide for that person’s quality of life without destroying their eligibility, because the trust (not the beneficiary) controls the assets.
If a loved one with a disability is part of your plan, do not use a standard will or revocable trust as the inheritance vehicle. Our special needs trust page explains how this protective structure works in New York.
The Trustee’s Role — and Why It Matters More Here
When you create an irrevocable trust, you hand real authority to a trustee, so choosing and instructing that person well is essential. Under New York law, a trustee is a fiduciary bound by serious duties:
- The prudent-investor standard (EPTL Article 11-A), requiring the trustee to invest and manage trust assets with care, skill, and diversification appropriate to the trust’s purposes.
- The duty of loyalty, meaning the trustee must act solely in the beneficiaries’ interest, free of self-dealing.
- The duty to account, obligating the trustee to keep records and report to beneficiaries.
New York law (under the SCPA and EPTL) sets out commission schedules that govern what a trustee may be paid; the specifics depend on the trust and the assets, and we walk clients through them during planning. Because an irrevocable trust cannot be casually rewritten, the quality of the drafting and the choice of trustee carry far more weight than they would in a revocable arrangement you could later fix.
Common New York Pitfalls
The permanence of an irrevocable trust is unforgiving of sloppy planning. The mistakes we see most often:
- Funding it too late for Medicaid. Waiting until a health crisis means the five-year look-back has not run. Plan early.
- Underestimating the cliff. Families assume “we’re under $7.35 million-ish” without precise valuation, then discover the estate crossed $7,717,500 and lost the whole exemption.
- Naming the wrong trustee. A permanent trust with an inattentive or conflicted trustee is hard to fix.
- Using the wrong tool. Reaching for an irrevocable trust when a revocable one would have served — or vice versa — because the comparison was never done carefully.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I ever change a New York irrevocable trust?
Generally, no — that permanence is the source of its tax and protection benefits. New York law allows certain limited modifications in narrow circumstances, but you should plan as though the terms are fixed. This is precisely why careful drafting matters so much; the irrevocable trust is not a document you revise on a whim like a revocable living trust.
Does an irrevocable trust avoid probate in New York?
Yes. Like a revocable trust, assets properly titled in an irrevocable trust pass outside the Surrogate’s Court probate process and remain private. A will, by contrast, must be probated and becomes a public record. See trust vs. will for the full comparison.
How does the five-year look-back affect Medicaid planning?
When you apply for nursing-home Medicaid in New York, transfers of assets — including funding an irrevocable trust — made within five years of the application can trigger a penalty period of ineligibility. That is why families who anticipate long-term care needs are urged to establish and fund the trust well in advance.
Will an irrevocable trust lower my New York estate tax?
It can. By removing assets from your taxable estate, an irrevocable trust may keep your estate below the 2026 basic exclusion of $7,350,000 or under the $7,717,500 cliff — above which the entire exemption is lost. A revocable trust offers no such benefit because you retain control of the assets.
How do I know whether I need an irrevocable or revocable trust?
It depends on whether you face estate-tax exposure, creditor risk, or future long-term-care costs. If you do, an irrevocable trust’s protections may justify giving up control. If you do not, a revocable trust usually delivers the privacy and probate-avoidance benefits without the permanence. A focused planning session sorts this out quickly.
Plan With Morgan Legal Group
Choosing between irrevocable and revocable structures — and between trusts and a will — is a comparison best made with experienced New York counsel. Morgan Legal Group serves clients statewide, from New York City and Long Island to Westchester, the Hudson Valley, and Upstate. Attorney Russel Morgan, Esq. and our team will weigh these options against your specific family, assets, and goals.
Schedule your consultation with Russel Morgan, Esq. to determine whether an irrevocable trust is the right protection for your estate.
Further reading from Morgan Legal Group: how an irrevocable trust works.