Who Can Benefit From a Special Needs Trust?
Consider making a special needs trust for a loved one who receives government benefits.
Someone With Permanent Special Needs
Special needs trusts are most commonly used for people who likely will need government assistance from the SSI and Medicaid programs their entire lives because of a permanent or severe disabling condition.
Not all persons with a disability qualify for SSI or Medicaid. Someone who is commonly understood to be “disabled” may not qualify for these public benefits if, despite the disabling condition, the person is able to earn a living.
People with blindness, developmental disabilities, Down syndrome, organic brain damage, chronic mental illness, physical paralysis (paraplegia), or congenital disabling afflictions such as cerebral palsy or cystic fibrosis have been the most common automatic beneficiaries of government benefits for persons with disabilities. But there are many other physical and mental conditions that meet the Social Security Administration’s definition of disability and that are likely to last a lifetime.
Source: nolo.com
Someone With Special Needs Who May Not Need Benefits Later
Many factors make it hard to predict whether someone who currently has a disability will always need to rely on SSI and Medicaid. Many disabling conditions are not permanent and changes in the workplace, new treatments for disabilities, and new technologies for living with disabilities may affect whether your loved one will need government benefits in the future.
While you may not be able to know with certainty whether your loved one will continue to need SSI or Medicaid, you can create a special needs trust without worrying that you will needlessly tie up your loved one’s inheritance. Most special needs trusts take into account the possibility that the trust, for whatever reason, may not always be necessary, and they give the trustee power to terminate the trust if that is the best for the beneficiary.
Source: nolo.com
Someone Who May Need Benefits Later
Some people who aren’t disabled now may need assistance from SSI or Medicaid at some point because of a condition that is likely to get worse. In this situation, creating a special needs trust involves some guesswork. But if you think it’s more likely than not that a loved one will need government assistance for a significant length of time, it makes sense to set up a special needs trust now. In the trust, you can give the trustee the power to terminate the trust if it is not needed.
Source: nolo.com
Someone Who Is Eligible for Medicare or SSDI
A loved one who receives Medicare or Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) may not need a special needs trust because these programs do not base eligibility on the amount of money or assets an applicant has. However, if the SSDI payment is low, SSI may be a valuable way to supplement your loved one’s income. And Medicaid may be necessary to provide benefits not included in the Medicare program for instance, long-term nursing home care.
Source: nolo.com
Someone Who Cannot Manage Finances
People whose temperaments make it unlikely that they will be able to wisely manage an inheritance are good candidates for a special needs trust, even if they ultimately won’t need SSI or Medicaid. Such trusts are often called “spendthrift” trusts when used to keep assets out of the hands of a beneficiary (and of his or her creditors) and in the firm control of a wise trustee. For example, someone with mild developmental disabilities, mild autism, attention deficit disorder, or bipolar syndrome might benefit from a trust that prevents reckless spending of inherited money even in the absence of a disability. (Read more about Spendthrift Trusts Another good reason to use a special needs trust is to prevent a loved one with a disability from being the victim of predators. There are many unscrupulous and dangerous people out there who will target a person with mental or physical disabilities if they believe the person has money. A special needs trust prevents a person with a disability from falling prey to these predators because the person with a disability does not have control over trust funds.
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Source:Â specialneedstrustsonline.com