Care Committees Help Trustees Make Decisions When They Don't Know It All
If you don't know one trustee who knows all there is to know about caring for a person with special needs, you may want to co...
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When serving as the trustee of a special needs trust, it is crucial to be careful when making distributions for the benefit of the trust beneficiary. This is particularly true if the beneficiary receives Supplemental Security Income (SSI) because any distribution could potentially violate Social Security’s rules regarding unearned income for SSI recipients. If a distribution runs afoul of these rules, the Social Security Administration will treat the distribution as unearned income on behalf of the beneficiary and reduce the beneficiary’s income dollar-for-dollar after the first $20 of the distribution.
The most common example of a distribution that would be deemed unearned income is when a trustee provides a cash reimbursement to a beneficiary for a purchase the beneficiary made, even if the beneficiary has a receipt. If the trustee reimburses the beneficiary directly, the reimbursement will be considered unearned income and the beneficiary’s SSI will be reduced dollar-for-dollar for the reimbursement.
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However, there are ways to make purchases for beneficiaries that will not negatively affect the beneficiary’s SSI benefits. Here are five examples of appropriate disbursements.
For more on being the trustee of the special needs trust, click here and here.
If you don't know one trustee who knows all there is to know about caring for a person with special needs, you may want to co...
Read moreIf you have funds in an IRA that will be distributed to a special needs trust upon your death, it is usually best to str...
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