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Special Needs Trust Attorney Boca Raton | Protect Government Benefits | Florida Wills & Trusts

Special Needs Trusts in Florida

Provide for your loved one with disabilities without jeopardizing the government benefits they depend on. A properly structured special needs trust supplements—never replaces—SSI and Medicaid.

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Protecting Benefits While Enhancing Life

If you have a child, grandchild, or other loved one with disabilities, you face a difficult planning challenge. You want to provide for them, but a direct inheritance could disqualify them from essential government benefits like SSI (Supplemental Security Income) and Medicaid—benefits that provide monthly income, healthcare coverage, and other vital support.

A special needs trust solves this problem. Assets held in a properly structured special needs trust are not counted as the beneficiary's resources for benefits eligibility. The trust can pay for things that enhance quality of life—a computer, a vacation, education, a vehicle—while government benefits continue to cover basic needs.

The key word is "supplemental." The trust supplements government benefits; it doesn't replace them. This is why proper drafting is essential.

Special needs trusts are a type of irrevocable trust with specific requirements that must be followed precisely. The beneficiary cannot have the right to demand distributions—the trustee must have discretion. Distributions must be made carefully to avoid reducing benefits. These rules are complex, and mistakes can be costly.

We help families throughout South Florida create special needs trusts that protect their loved ones' benefits while providing for a better quality of life. Whether you're leaving an inheritance or the disabled person has received their own funds, we'll structure the trust correctly.

Why Proper Drafting Matters

A poorly drafted trust can disqualify your loved one from benefits. SSI has strict asset limits—even a small mistake can trigger loss of essential coverage.

Benefits Protected

  • SSI (Supplemental Security Income)
  • Medicaid health coverage
  • Section 8 housing assistance
  • SNAP food assistance
  • Other means-tested programs

Two Types of Special Needs Trusts

The right type depends on where the money comes from.

Third-Party Special Needs Trust

Funded with someone else's money

Created by parents, grandparents, or others who want to leave an inheritance to a disabled beneficiary. The money was never the disabled person's—it's a gift or bequest.

  • No Medicaid payback required at death
  • Remaining assets pass to family
  • Can be created during life or in a will
  • Most common type for estate planning

First-Party Special Needs Trust

Funded with the disabled person's own money

Used when the disabled person receives their own funds—such as a personal injury settlement, an inheritance received directly, or other assets in their name.

  • Medicaid payback required at death
  • Preserves benefits eligibility
  • Beneficiary must be under 65 at creation
  • Common after settlements or direct inheritance

What the Trust Can (and Cannot) Pay For

Understanding the rules is essential to protecting benefits.

Trust CAN Pay For

  • Electronics, computers, tablets, phones
  • Vacations, entertainment, recreation
  • Education, training, tutoring
  • Vehicle purchase and modifications
  • Furniture and home furnishings
  • Personal care beyond Medicaid coverage
  • Medical expenses not covered by Medicaid
  • Legal and accounting services

Use Caution With

  • Cash payments directly to beneficiary
  • Food (may reduce SSI by 1/3)
  • Shelter/rent (may reduce SSI by 1/3)
  • Mortgage payments
  • Utilities (counted as shelter)
  • Property taxes (counted as shelter)

Note: Paying for food or shelter isn't prohibited—it just may reduce SSI benefits. Sometimes that trade-off makes sense.

Who Needs a Special Needs Trust?

Families in these situations should consider special needs planning.

Parents of Disabled Children

Want to leave an inheritance without disqualifying your child from benefits they'll need throughout their life.

Grandparents

Planning to leave assets to a grandchild with disabilities—need to structure the gift to protect benefits.

Settlement Recipients

Disabled person receiving a personal injury settlement or other lump sum that would disqualify them from benefits.

Unexpected Inheritances

Disabled person who inherited assets directly (before proper planning was done) and needs to preserve eligibility.

Siblings as Caregivers

Planning for a disabled sibling's future—ensuring they're cared for after parents are gone.

Divorce Situations

Ensuring child support or alimony for a disabled spouse is structured to preserve their benefits.

Choosing the Right Trustee

The trustee of a special needs trust has a uniquely challenging role. They must understand both the beneficiary's needs and the complex rules governing these trusts—what can be paid for, how payments must be structured, and how to avoid jeopardizing benefits.

Many families choose a trusted family member who knows the beneficiary well. Some pair a family member with a professional trustee or trust company that handles the financial and compliance aspects. Others use a pooled trust administered by a nonprofit organization.

The disabled beneficiary generally cannot serve as their own trustee—that would give them the control that makes assets "countable" for benefits purposes. We can help you think through the right structure for your family.

Trustee Responsibilities

  • Understand and follow SNT distribution rules
  • Pay for goods/services directly—not cash to beneficiary
  • Keep detailed records of all distributions
  • File required tax returns for the trust
  • Coordinate with benefits administrators
  • Advocate for the beneficiary's quality of life

Common Questions About Special Needs Trusts

Answers to questions we hear most often from South Florida families.

A special needs trust (also called a supplemental needs trust) is a legal arrangement that holds assets for a person with disabilities without disqualifying them from means-tested government benefits like SSI (Supplemental Security Income) and Medicaid. The trust supplements—but doesn't replace—government benefits, enhancing the beneficiary's quality of life.
A third-party special needs trust is funded with someone else's money—typically parents or grandparents leaving an inheritance. A first-party (or self-settled) special needs trust is funded with the disabled person's own money—such as an inheritance they received directly or a personal injury settlement. The key difference: first-party trusts must include a Medicaid payback provision; third-party trusts do not.
A special needs trust can pay for things that enhance quality of life beyond what government benefits provide: electronics and computers, vacations and entertainment, education and training, vehicle purchases and modifications, home furnishings, personal care attendants beyond Medicaid coverage, and much more. It generally should not pay for food or shelter directly, as this can reduce SSI benefits (though sometimes this trade-off makes sense).
A properly drafted special needs trust should not affect SSI or Medicaid eligibility. The trust must be structured so the beneficiary has no legal right to demand distributions—making the assets "unavailable" for benefits purposes. This is why proper drafting is essential; a poorly worded trust can disqualify your child from the benefits they depend on.
The trustee should be someone who understands both the beneficiary's needs and the complex rules governing special needs trusts. Many families choose a trusted family member, sometimes paired with a professional trustee or trust company for financial management. The disabled beneficiary generally cannot be their own trustee. We can help you think through the right choice for your family.
For third-party special needs trusts, remaining assets pass to whoever you designate—typically other family members. For first-party special needs trusts, Medicaid must be repaid for benefits provided during the beneficiary's lifetime before remaining assets pass to heirs. This "payback" requirement is a key distinction between the two types.

Plan for Your Loved One's Future

A special needs trust can provide security and enhanced quality of life while protecting the benefits your loved one depends on. Let's discuss the right approach for your family.

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