Estate planning by parents who have children with disabilities includes the following challenges:
- How do you leave funds for the benefit of the child without causing the child to lose important public benefits?
- How do you make sure that the funds are well managed?
- How do you make sure that your other children are not over-burdened with caring for the disabled sibling?
- What is fair in terms of dividing your estate among your disabled child and your other children?
- How do you make sure there’s enough money to meet your disabled child’s needs?
Often, parents of children with special needs try to resolve these issues by leaving their estates to their healthy children — disinheriting the disabled children. These parents offer a variety of justifications for this approach:
- The disabled child shouldn’t receive anything because she can’t manage money and would lose her benefits.
- She doesn’t need any inheritance because she will be taken care of by the public benefits she receives.
- The other children will take care of their sister.
This approach is to be discouraged for a number of reasons. First, public benefits programs are often inadequate. They need to be supplemented with other resources.
Second, both public benefits programs and individual circumstances change over time. What’s working today may not work tomorrow. Other resources need to be available, just in case.
Third, relying on one’s other children to take care of their siblings places an undue burden on them and can strain relations between them. It makes it unclear whether inherited money belongs to the healthy child to spend as he pleases, or whether he must set it aside for his disabled sister. If one child sets money aside, and the other doesn’t, resentments can build that may split the family forever.
The better answer to many of these questions is a special type of trust called a“Supplemental Needs Trust” or a “Special Needs Trust.” Such trusts fulfill two primary functions: the first is to manage funds for someone who may not be able to do so himself or herself due to disability.
The second is to preserve the beneficiary’s eligibility for public benefits, whether that be Medicaid, Supplemental Security Income, public housing, or any other program. They come into play in a multitude of situations, including parents planning for a disabled child, a disabled individual coming into an inheritance or winning or settling a personal injury claim, or one spouse planning for a disabled spouse.
First, a short explanation of what trusts are and how they work: A trust is a form of ownership of property, whether real estate or investments, where one person – the trustee – manages such property for the benefit of someone else – the beneficiary.
The trustee must follow the instructions laid out in the trust agreement as to how to spend the trust funds on the beneficiary’s behalf – whether and when to distribute the trust income and principal. In the special needs context, trusts fall generally into two main categories: self-settled trusts that the beneficiary creates for himself with his own money and third-party trusts that one person creates and funds for the benefit of someone else.
Each situation and each benefit program has its own rules which affect the drafting, funding and administration of special needs trusts. The public benefit programs in many ways track the treatment of trusts in terms of creditor protection.
Just as in most states you cannot create a trust for your own benefit and protect the trust funds from creditors, you generally cannot create a trust for your own benefit and have the funds uncountable for purposes of Medicaid, SSI and other public benefits programs. However, Medicaid and SSI have provided for “safe harbors” that permit the creation of self-settled special needs trusts in certain circumstances.
Preserving Public Benefits
In general, if one person creates a trust for the benefit of someone else, and the trust is drafted to give the trustee complete discretion whether and when to make distributions to the beneficiary, the trust funds will not be considered as available when considering the trust beneficiary’s eligibility for public benefits. Unfortunately, matters get more complicated when the trust assets are actually used for the beneficiary. For instance, trust funds distributed to a beneficiary will reduce that beneficiary’s SSI dollar for dollar. In many circumstances, trust funds used on the beneficiary’s behalf will also cause a reduction in SSI benefits. In other words, while the existence of a properly-drafted trust will not affect eligibility for benefits, the use of the trust funds could if extreme care is not taken.
Choice of Trustee for Your Special Needs Trust
Choosing a trustee is one of the most difficult parts of planning for a child with special needs. The trustee of a special needs trust must be able to fulfill all of the normal functions of a trustee – accounting, investments, tax returns and distributions – and also be able to meet the needs of the special beneficiary.
The latter can include an understanding of various public benefits programs, sensitivity to the needs of the beneficiary, and knowledge of services that may be available. There are a number of possible solutions available. Often parents choose to appoint co-trustees – a trust company or law firm as a professional trustee along with a healthy child as a family trustee.
Working together, they can provide the necessary experience to meet the needs of the child with special needs. Unfortunately, in many cases such a combination is not available. Professional trustees generally require a minimum amount of funds in the trust, usually at least $500,000.
Otherwise their fees become unreasonable in relation to the size of the trust. In other situations, there is no appropriate family member to appoint as co-trustee. Where the size of the trust is insufficient to justify hiring a professional trustee, two solutions are possible.
The first option is simply to have a family member trustee who would hire accountants, attorneys and investment advisors to help with administering the trust. The second option is to use a pooled trust. There are several “third-party” pooled trusts in Virginia , not to be confused “(d)(4)(C)” trusts which are described below.
A third-party pooled trust can provide a way to benefit from a special needs trust without creating one yourself. A Virginia nonprofit organization creates a pooled trust and selects a trustee. Individual people have separate accounts, but all the money is pooled together and invested by the trustee. Individual beneficiaries get the services of a professional trustee and more investment options because there is more money overall.
Where no appropriate family member is available to serve as co-trustee, the parent may direct the professional trustee to consult with named individuals who know and care for the child with special needs.
These could be family members who are not appropriate trustees, but who can serve in an advisory role. Or they may be social workers or care managers or others who have both personal and professional knowledge of the beneficiary. This role may be formalized in the trust document as a “Care Committee.”
Funding the Special Needs Trust
A number of issues arise with respect to the question of how much to put into the trust.
- How much will your child with special needs require over her life?
- Should you leave the same portion of your estate to all of your children, no matter their need? How will you assure that there’s enough money?
The first question is a difficult one. It depends on what assumptions you make about your child’s needs and the availability of other resources to fulfill those needs.
A financial planner or life care planner with experience in this area can help make projections to assist with this determination. But in all cases it’s better to err on the side of more money rather than less.
You can’t be certain current programs will continue. And you have to factor in paying for services, such as case management, that you provide free-of-charge today. If these assumptions mean that your child with special needs will require a large percentage of your estate, how will your other children feel if they receive less than their pro rata share?
After all, your estate may already be smaller than it would be otherwise due to the time and money spent providing for the child with special needs. And your other children may have received less of your attention growing up than they would have otherwise had they not had a child with special needs.
One solution to the question of fairness and to the challenge of assuring that there are enough funds is life insurance. You could divide your estate equally among your children, but supplement the amount going to the special needs trust for your child with special needs with life insurance.
The younger you are when you start, the more affordable the premiums will be. And if you are married, the premiums can often be lower if you purchase a policy that pays out only when the second parent dies.
Self-Settled Special Needs Trusts
The above discussion primarily involves estate planning by parents for money they plan to leave for their children with special needs that the parents create, called a “third-party” special needs trust. This type of third-party special needs trust can also serve to hold any inheritance that may come from a grandparent or other family member.
However, a third-party special needs trust cannot hold funds belonging to the disabled individual himself. As a general rule, the funds held by such a self-settled trust would be considered available to the disabled beneficiary and render him ineligible for Medicaid or SSI benefit.
Fortunately, both Medicaid and SSI allow two types of “self-settled” trusts that permit a beneficiary to shelter his own funds, qualify for public benefits, and remain a continuing beneficiary of the trusts. These trusts fall in two categories:
- Single-beneficiary trusts
- Pooled trusts.
The single-beneficiary self-settled trust is generally referred to as a “(d)(4)(A)” trust, referring to the enabling statute, or a “pay-back” trust, referring to their primary feature that any funds remaining in the trusts upon the beneficiary’s death be used to reimburse the Commonwealth for any Medicaid expenditures it has made on the beneficiary’s behalf.
Only if funds remain after such reimbursement may they be passed on to the beneficiary’s family. Pooled self-settled trusts are generally referred to as “(d)(4)(C)” trusts, again referring to the enabling statute, or “pooled disability” trusts. Like the third-party pooled trusts described above, these are operated by non-profit organizations.
Each of these self-settled trusts has its own rules which must be strictly followed to qualify for the Medicaid and SSI exceptions. A “(d)(4)(A)” trust must be created while the disabled individual is under age 65 and must be established by his or her parent, grandparent, legal guardian, or by a court. A “(d)(4)(A)” trust also must provide that at the beneficiary’s death any remaining trust funds will first be used to reimburse the state for Medicaid paid on the beneficiary’s behalf.
Pooled disability trusts must be managed by a non-profit association. Unlike individual disability trusts, which may be created only for those under age 65, pooled trusts may be for beneficiaries of any age and may be created by the beneficiary herself.
In addition, at the beneficiary’s death the state does not have to be repaid for its Medicaid expenses on her behalf as long as the funds are retained in the trust for the benefit of other disabled beneficiaries. Although a pooled trust is an option for a disabled individual over age 65 who is receiving Medicaid or SSI, those over age 65 who make transfers to the trust will incur a transfer penalty.
Estate Planning For A Second Marriage
Anytime people are entering into a second (or subsequent) marriage, I strongly recommend a prenup.
Many people think of a premarital agreement as only dealing with what happens in the event of a divorce. However, the most important reason for a premarital agreement is to determine how your estate will be distributed if one of you dies during the marriage, especially if your marriage becomes a long-term marriage (which, of course, is the intended goal of all marriages).
Even if you have already completed an estate plan of your own, a new marriage typically calls for significant changes to your plan.
Although both parties to a new marriage have the right to hire separate attorneys in connection with creation of a premarital agreement , many couples prefer to go through this process together, via mediation, in order to minimize the expense and avoid the adversarial nature of being represented by two separate attorneys.
The advantages of having two separate attorneys is that both parties both receive completely independent, private, and confidential advice. By going through mediation in an effort to develop a written agreement and estate plan, you will be giving up these advantages. If you choose mediation, the purpose of the mediation will be to attempt to arrive, in a cooperative and informal manner, at a mutually acceptable agreement that resolves all financial and legal issues that may arise in connection with your upcoming marriage, your existing marriage, or your co-ownership of property.
Evan Farr is a trained mediator and is available to mediate premarital contracts with couples planning to enter into a second or subsequent marriage, with a goal of preparing the agreement and then doing the subsequent estate planning for the couple. To get started, please complete our Intake Form.
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