Special Needs Trusts
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Transcript Special Needs Trusts
Special Needs Trusts
Making Life Better For
Persons With
Disabilities
Also called….
Supplemental Needs Trust
SNT
Disability Trust
Qualifying Trust
Means Tested Public
Benefits* Resource Limit:
$2,000.00
*such as Medicaid and SSI
Special Needs Trust
Allows a person with a disability to receive
distributions from the trust without the trust
being counted as a resource.
Maintains eligibility for public benefits while
enhancing quality of life.
How?
Spend on Special Needs but not Support
Trust money cannot be used:
To pay for the beneficiary’s food or shelter
To give cash directly to beneficiary
To give anything to the beneficiary that she
could convert to cash
Examples of Things Trust Monies
Can Not Pay For
Mortgage
Electric bill
Real property taxes
What Can Trust
Distributions Be Spent On?
Cable bill
Eyeglasses
Training and
education
Phone bill
Movies
Books on tape
Transportation
Fresh flowers
Vacation
Companion
Television
Laundry service
Pet expenses
Travel
Magic Language
Trust intended to supplement, not
supplant, public benefits
Types of trusts
Self funded - uses
the disabled person’s
own money to fund
the trust. Example:
personal injury
settlement
Third party funded - uses
money belonging to
someone other than the
disabled person to fund
the trust. Example:
grandparent leaves $ in
trust for disabled
person’s benefit
Payback
Self funded trusts must have payback
provision
Money left in the trust at the death of the
beneficiary goes first to pay back the state
for Medicaid benefits
No obligation to conserve funds for the
state
Types of Self
Funded Trusts
(d)(4)(A)
Established by
parent, grandparent,
legal guardian or
court
Individual, stand
alone
(d)(4)(C)
Master Pooled Trust
Established &
managed by a
nonprofit organization
Example: Arc of
Texas Master Pooled
Trust
Over 65 Caution
Persons over age 65
who transfer their own
money to a Special
Needs Trust create a
period of ineligibility.
Third party trusts
Somebody
else’s money
No pay back provision needed
No age restrictions
Can be established during Grantor’s
lifetime (inter vivos) or by Will
Types of Distribution Standards
Strict - absolutely no distributions for food
or shelter
Broad - distributions for food or shelter
okay so long as beneficiary not
disqualified for public benefits
Discretionary - any distribution okay;
trustee has absolute and unfettered
discretion to distribute or not distribute
Types of Trustees
Individual
Potential conflict of interest with third party
funded trusts
Has to keep up with continually changing
regulations
Corporate
Keeps up with changes in regulations
Professional management of funds