If you want control and flexibility, you generally want a revocable living trust; if your goal is estate-tax reduction, asset protection, or Medicaid eligibility, you generally need an irrevocable trust. That is the short answer. The longer — and more important — answer is that most New Yorkers choose the wrong one, or use the right one incorrectly, because they focus on the label instead of the goal. Both trusts are governed by New York’s Estates, Powers and Trusts Law (EPTL) Article 7, but they do very different jobs, and confusing them is one of the most expensive mistakes in estate planning.
This guide takes a mistakes-to-avoid approach. Rather than just defining each trust, we’ll walk through the specific, costly pitfalls our attorneys at Morgan Legal Group see again and again — so you can choose correctly the first time.
The Core Difference in One Table
| Feature | Revocable Living Trust | Irrevocable Trust |
|---|---|---|
| Can you amend or revoke it? | Yes — you keep full control | Generally no |
| Avoids probate? | Yes | Yes |
| Provides privacy? | Yes | Yes |
| Manages incapacity? | Yes | Yes |
| Reduces NY estate tax? | No — assets stay in your taxable estate | Yes |
| Protects assets from creditors? | No | Yes (when properly structured) |
| Helps with Medicaid eligibility? | No | Yes — subject to the 5-year look-back |
The pattern is clear: a revocable trust buys you control and convenience, while an irrevocable trust buys you protection — but only because you give up control. You cannot have both in the same trust. Trying to is the first mistake.
Learn more on our Trusts Overview page.
Mistake #1: Choosing a Revocable Trust to “Save on Estate Taxes”
This is the single most common misconception. A revocable living trust does not save a dime in estate tax. Because you retain the power to amend or revoke it, New York and the IRS still treat the assets as part of your taxable estate.
Why this matters in 2026: New York’s basic exclusion amount is $7,350,000. But New York has a brutal “cliff.” If your taxable estate exceeds 105% of the exclusion — $7,717,500 — you lose the ENTIRE exemption, not just the overage. The estate is taxed from the first dollar. Families who assumed their revocable trust solved this problem discover, too late, that it never could. If estate-tax reduction is your goal, you need an Irrevocable Trust, not a revocable one.
Mistake #2: Creating the Trust but Never Funding It
A trust is only as good as the assets titled into it. We regularly see beautifully drafted Revocable Living Trusts sitting empty because the grantor never re-titled the house, the bank accounts, or the brokerage account into the trust’s name.
An unfunded trust avoids nothing. The assets still pass through Surrogate’s Court probate — the very public, time-consuming process the trust was supposed to bypass. Funding is not a formality; it is the entire point.
Mistake #3: Putting Assets in an Irrevocable Trust Too Late
Irrevocable trusts are the backbone of Medicaid planning in New York, but they carry a five-year look-back period. Transfers made into an irrevocable trust within five years of applying for nursing-home Medicaid can trigger a penalty period of ineligibility.
The mistake is waiting until a health crisis hits. By then, the clock cannot be turned back. The most protective move is to plan early — ideally years before care is needed — so the look-back window has fully closed.
Mistake #4: Treating an Irrevocable Trust as If You Still Own It
When you transfer assets into an irrevocable trust, you generally give up control. You cannot freely amend it, and you should not treat the trust’s money as your personal piggy bank. Doing so can collapse the very asset protection and Medicaid benefits you were trying to secure. If retaining control is essential to you, an irrevocable trust is the wrong tool — period.
Mistake #5: Forgetting About a Disabled Beneficiary’s Benefits
If a child or loved one receives means-tested benefits like Medicaid or SSI, leaving them money directly — even through a standard trust — can disqualify them. The solution is a Supplemental (Special) Needs Trust under EPTL 7-1.12, which holds assets for a disabled beneficiary without counting against their eligibility. Skipping this step is heartbreakingly common and entirely avoidable. See our Special Needs Trust page.
Mistake #6: Choosing a Trustee Who Doesn’t Understand the Duties
A trustee is a fiduciary. Under New York law, a trustee must follow the prudent-investor standard (EPTL Article 11-A), observe a duty of loyalty, and a duty to account to the beneficiaries. Naming a well-meaning but unqualified friend or relative often leads to mismanagement, family conflict, and even personal liability.
New York’s SCPA and EPTL set out statutory commission schedules that govern what a trustee may be paid — another reason to choose someone who understands the role. Our Trust Administration team helps trustees meet these obligations correctly.
Trust vs. Will: A Related Mistake
Many people assume a will accomplishes what a trust does. It does not. A will is public and must be probated in the Surrogate’s Court, while a trust avoids probate and stays private. Relying solely on a will when your goals call for privacy or incapacity planning is a strategic miss. Compare your options on our Trust vs. Will page.
How to Decide: Match the Tool to the Goal
- Want to avoid probate, keep privacy, and plan for incapacity while staying in full control? A revocable living trust is likely your foundation.
- Need to shrink your taxable estate, shield assets from creditors, or qualify for Medicaid down the road? An irrevocable trust is the right vehicle — start the five-year clock early.
- Have a disabled beneficiary? Layer in a Supplemental Needs Trust under EPTL 7-1.12.
- Have a sizable estate near $7.35M? Watch the cliff at $7,717,500 carefully and plan to stay under it.
Many families ultimately use both types of trust together — a revocable trust for everyday control and an irrevocable trust for protection — which is exactly why personalized counsel matters.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does a revocable trust protect my assets from creditors or nursing-home costs?
No. Because you retain control, the assets remain yours for creditor and Medicaid purposes. Only a properly structured irrevocable trust offers that protection.
Can I change an irrevocable trust after I sign it?
Generally, no. That permanence is what makes it effective for tax and asset-protection goals. Limited modification may be possible in narrow circumstances, but you should never count on it.
What is the New York estate tax cliff?
For 2026, the basic exclusion is $7,350,000. If your estate exceeds 105% of that — $7,717,500 — you lose the entire exemption and the estate is taxed from the first dollar.
Is a trust better than a will?
They serve different purposes. A trust avoids probate and keeps your affairs private; a will must be probated publicly in the Surrogate’s Court. Most complete plans use both.
Talk to a New York Trust Attorney
Choosing between a revocable and irrevocable trust — and avoiding the costly mistakes above — is a decision best made with experienced guidance. Russel Morgan, Esq. and the team at Morgan Legal Group help New York families across the state build trust plans that actually accomplish their goals.
Schedule your consultation with Russel Morgan, Esq.
Further reading from Morgan Legal Group: how an irrevocable trust works.