If you are planning for a loved one with unique needs, a Special Needs Trust can help protect benefits while providing for future care.
Our Rio Dell team works with families to design, fund, and manage these trusts in compliance with California law.
A properly structured trust can preserve eligibility for government programs, reduce risk to benefits, and provide predictable funding for care.
Ling Law Group serves families across California with a thoughtful approach to estate planning, trusts, and guardianship matters.
A Special Needs Trust holds assets for a beneficiary without compromising eligibility for needs-based assistance.
We tailor the plan to your family’s goals, the beneficiary’s needs, and applicable rules in California.
A Special Needs Trust is a fiduciary arrangement designed to supplement government benefits while preserving the beneficiary’s access to essential services.
We guide you through choosing a trustee, outlining distributions, funding the trust, and arranging ongoing reviews.
Definitions of common terms used in special needs planning and trust administration.
The person who benefits from the trust.
A trust designed to preserve benefits while providing supplemental funds for care and support.
Carefully structured to avoid disqualifying the beneficiary from programs like SSI and Medicaid.
Methods to fund the trust include cash, assets transferred from family, or life insurance.
We compare guardianship, pay-on-death arrangements, and special needs trusts to determine the best fit for your situation in California.
When assets are modest and public benefits remain intact, a simpler trust plan may be appropriate.
If family goals are straightforward and the beneficiary’s needs are predictable, a lighter approach can work with careful oversight.
California benefit rules can be nuanced, requiring careful planning and coordinated documents.
A full-service approach helps set up governance, reporting, and future amendments.
From clarity on assets to ongoing maintenance, a complete plan reduces surprises and protects eligibility.
A thoughtfully designed plan helps families feel confident in the future.
Structured processes support ongoing management and timely distributions.
Gather family goals, financial details, and documents to begin the conversation with our team.
Benefit programs change; we help you stay compliant and proactive.
Protect government benefits while planning for care and long-term support.
Create a clear plan for guardianship, finances, and asset management that aligns with your family’s values.
Disability and the need for ongoing support, aging family members, and changes in benefits.
When the beneficiary relies on public benefits or needs long-term assistance.
When ownership of assets could impact eligibility or future planning.
Preparing for changes in caregiving and guardianship as circumstances evolve.
We take time to understand your family’s goals and facts before recommending a plan.
Clear communication, straightforward fees, and practical solutions guide every step.
Based in California with a client-centered approach.
We begin with a consultation to understand your needs, followed by a customized plan and documents.
Discuss goals, collect documents, and outline next steps.
We collect assets, beneficiary details, and benefit program information.
We present options and a proposed plan for feedback.
We draft the trust and related documents tailored to your situation.
Prepare the trust instrument and ancillary documents.
Review with you and finalize the documents.
Fund the trust and implement distributions and governance.
Transfer assets into the trust in a compliant way.
Activate the trust and establish ongoing management.
Results-focused representation without big-firm overhead. We combine aggressive advocacy with AI and modern tools to expedite your legal issues with precision. We have closed over nine figures in litigation and transactional deals while keeping fees sensible.
Results-focused representation without big-firm overhead. We combine aggressive advocacy with AI and modern tools to expedite your legal issues with precision. We have closed over nine figures in litigation and transactional deals while keeping fees sensible.
A Special Needs Trust (SNT) is a legal instrument that allows assets to be managed for the benefit of a person with a disability without disqualifying them from needs-based benefits. Eligible individuals include those who receive state or federal programs and may rely on these services in the future. The trust structure helps coordinate care and support while preserving eligibility.
Yes, a properly drafted SNT can preserve eligibility for programs like SSI and Medicaid by not counting assets held in the trust toward program limits. The trust must be set up and administered according to program rules and California law to avoid unintended consequences.
Funding typically comes from the grantor or family, with the trustee managing distributions. Trustees can be a trusted family member, friend, or a professional fiduciary who understands the beneficiary’s needs and the trust terms.
Yes, in many cases an SNT can be amended or terminated with proper legal steps and in accordance with the trust provisions and applicable law. Changes are common as family circumstances evolve.
Costs vary with complexity and local rates, usually covering initial consultation, documents, funding guidance, and ongoing administration. We provide clear pricing and expectations up front.
Timeline depends on asset readiness, beneficiary needs, and coordination with benefit programs. Straightforward cases may take weeks to a few months.
Typical documents include existing estate planning papers, lists of assets, beneficiary information, and details about current benefit programs. We guide you on what to gather.
Alternatives include guardianships or other types of trusts, depending on goals and eligibility. We review options to fit your family’s circumstances.
Real property can be transferred to a Special Needs Trust via deed or by transferring the property’s value into the trust. Proper title and transfer steps are essential.
If the beneficiary dies, remaining trust assets are distributed per the trust terms, which may include a remainder for family, a charity, or other beneficiaries as permitted.