If you’re a Miami parent or sibling caring for a loved one with a disability, one fear sits at the top of the list: what happens when I’m no longer here? Leaving money directly to a person with disabilities can accidentally disqualify them from essential benefits. A special needs trust is the planning tool built to solve exactly this problem under Florida law.
Why a Direct Inheritance Can Backfire
Many Florida benefit programs, including Medicaid and Supplemental Security Income (SSI), are means-tested. They have strict asset and income limits. If your loved one suddenly receives an inheritance or a lump sum, they can be pushed over those limits and lose coverage they depend on for medical care, housing support, and daily living. A special needs trust lets you provide for them without that money counting against the limits.
How a Special Needs Trust Works
The trust holds assets for the benefit of your loved one, but they don’t own those assets outright. A trustee you choose manages the funds and uses them for “supplemental” needs, the extras that government benefits don’t cover: therapies, education, technology, travel, a caregiver’s services, or recreation. Because the beneficiary can’t simply demand the money, it generally doesn’t disqualify them from Medicaid or SSI.
Third-Party vs. First-Party Trusts
There are two main types. A third-party special needs trust is funded with someone else’s money, typically a parent or grandparent, and is the most common choice for Miami families planning an inheritance. A first-party (or self-settled) special needs trust is funded with the disabled person’s own assets, such as a personal injury settlement or a direct inheritance they already received. First-party trusts come with a Medicaid payback requirement after the beneficiary’s death, while properly designed third-party trusts generally do not.
Choosing the Right Trustee
The trustee role is demanding. They must understand benefit rules well enough to avoid accidentally disqualifying the beneficiary with the wrong kind of distribution. Some Miami families name a trusted relative, others use a professional trustee or a pooled trust administered by a nonprofit. The choice depends on your family’s size, the trust’s value, and who can serve responsibly for the long term.
Coordinate the Rest of the Plan
A special needs trust only works if the rest of your estate plan points to it. Make sure your will, your revocable trust under Chapter 736, and your beneficiary designations on life insurance and retirement accounts all direct assets into the trust, not directly to your loved one. A single outdated beneficiary form can undo years of careful planning.
A Note Before You Act
This is general information, not legal advice, and benefit rules change. Special needs planning blends estate law with complex public-benefits rules, so it is not a do-it-yourself project. A licensed Florida estate planning attorney in the Miami area who handles special needs planning can build a trust that truly protects your loved one’s future and their benefits.
For more on our Florida practice, see our overview of Florida estate planning. Morgan Legal Group's affiliated New York office also handles Article 81 guardianship in New York.