When Flexibility Matters in Special Needs Trusts

Parents of a young child with special needs may be unable to assess whether their child will actually be eligible to receive government benefits in the future because of an inability to determine whether the child will be able to be self-supporting and earn income through employment as an adult. For example, children with Asperger’s Syndrome, mild autism and other issues may become part of the mainstream. Locking assets up in a special needs trust for the child’s benefit where assets are to be used for luxury items only may not be the best way of utilizing the assets towards the child’s care in those circumstances. In this situation, the parent’s estate plan can create the flexibility to reassess the situation in the future. The trust could initially be structured as a lifetime trust for the benefit of the child. The trustee could have the ability to make income and principal distributions to that child for health, education, maintenance and support purposes for the life of the child.

If, in the future, the trustee believes that the child has the financial savvy and wherewithal to handle the investments on his or her own, the trustee would always have the ability to make discretionary distributions of principal to the child or to terminate the trust entirely and distribute the assets to the child.

Alternatively, if the trustee determines in the future that the child cannot be self-supporting and would be eligible to receive government assistance, the trustee could have the flexibility to convert this trust at the time of that assessment to a special needs trust. The conversion would not require court consent and upon conversion, the trustee would have the ability to use trust assets for luxury items (items not otherwise covered by government assistance) such as equipment, vacation costs and therapies and any other expenses to supplement (but not replace) government benefits.

The family should be careful in assessing who is the best individual to serve as trustee of this trust as this person will be responsible for making the determination as to how this trust should be structured going forward. This flexible structure permits the child to achieve his or her potential allowing the trustee to use trust assets to enhance the child’s lifestyle, while ensuring that the trust will not create a impediment to the best care of the child where government assistance is needed in the future.
 

Allocation of Assets to a Special Needs Trust

In preparing a Will, parents of a special needs child must give careful thought as to how to divide up their assets among multiple children. In deciding how to allocate resources, consideration should be given to the financial needs of each child, the ability of each child to support himself or herself both currently and in the future and the message sent to children in the decision of how to divide assets. There is no right or wrong answer but the general default rule of estate planning to leave assets equally to children should not be an assumption which is accepted without careful consideration.

When all children are very young, often assets are divided equally among children since all children are dependent at that time. As children get older, where a special needs child will have a large portion of his or her needs met through government assistance and may not have the expensive lifestyle of other children, some parents cap the amount allocated to that child (after ensuring sufficient assets are available to supplement monies from government assistance to provide the lifestyle the parent wants for such child) with the balance of the assets distributed to the other children.

Alternatively, parents may decide that other children will be able to support themselves in the future so a larger share of the estate should be allocated to a special needs child.

In considering this issue, the value of the assets to be divided up must be considered as well as the anticipated expense of each of the children and potential sources of payment of these expenses (earned income, governmental benefits, potential outside inheritances, to name a few). Further, since all of these variables change over time, the decision on how to allocate assets among children should be revisited every few years.