When an Individual Trust Isn’t the Right Fit
Not every family can afford $3,000-$5,000 for an individual trust. Not every estate is large enough to justify one. And not every family has someone willing and able to serve as trustee for decades. Pooled trusts solve all three problems.
A pooled special needs trust is managed by a nonprofit organization that combines investment funds from multiple beneficiaries while maintaining separate accounts for each person. You get professional management, lower costs, and a built-in trustee — without needing to find (and pay) one yourself.
For the full comparison of all trust types, see our Complete SNT Guide.
How Pooled Trusts Work
- You join an existing trust managed by a nonprofit — no need to draft a new trust document from scratch
- Your funds go into a sub-account maintained separately for your beneficiary
- Investment funds are pooled across all beneficiaries for better returns and lower per-person costs
- The nonprofit serves as trustee — handling investments, distributions, tax filings, and compliance
- You (or a designated advocate) request distributions for qualified supplemental expenses
What Makes Pooled Trusts Different
| Feature | Pooled Trust | Individual SNT |
|---|---|---|
| Setup cost | $0 – $1,500 | $2,000 – $5,000+ |
| Trustee | Built-in (the nonprofit) | You must find and appoint one |
| Age limit | None — accepts any age | Under 65 for first-party |
| Minimum deposit | Often $1,000–$5,000 | No minimum but impractical below ~$50,000 |
| Can hold first-party funds | Yes | Yes (if drafted as first-party) |
| Can hold third-party funds | Yes (many programs) | Yes (if drafted as third-party) |
| Control over investments | Limited — nonprofit manages | Full — trustee decides |
| Personalization | Less — standard program terms | Full — custom drafted |
The Over-65 Advantage
This is the pooled trust’s unique superpower. Individual first-party trusts cannot accept new funds after the beneficiary turns 65. But pooled trusts can — they’re the only trust option for protecting assets received after age 65.
However, there’s a catch in some states: transfers to a pooled trust after age 65 may trigger a Medicaid transfer penalty (a period of Medicaid ineligibility). This varies significantly by state. Check your state guide before making any transfers for a beneficiary over 65.
Payback Rules for Pooled Trusts
This is where it gets nuanced — and where pooled trusts differ from individual first-party trusts:
| Fund Type in Pooled Trust | What Happens at Death |
|---|---|
| First-party sub-account | State may claim Medicaid reimbursement; many programs allow the remainder to stay with the nonprofit (serving other beneficiaries) rather than going to the state |
| Third-party sub-account | No Medicaid payback; remainder goes to designated beneficiaries or the nonprofit (per program terms) |
The fact that remaining first-party funds may go to the nonprofit rather than the state is a distinguishing feature. Some families prefer this — the money stays in the disability community rather than going to a state general fund. Review each program’s specific remainder policies before enrolling.
When a Pooled Trust Makes Sense
- Smaller estates (under $100,000) — an individual trust’s fees may consume a disproportionate share
- No suitable individual trustee — family is unavailable, unqualified, or unwilling
- Beneficiary over 65 — pooled trust is the only option for new first-party funds
- Need for professional management — investments, tax filings, compliance handled for you
- Transitional situations — quick setup needed (e.g., settlement arriving, inheritance clearing probate)
When an Individual Trust Is Better
- Larger estates (over $100,000-$200,000) — individual trust gives more control and may be more cost-effective at scale
- Specific trustee in mind — a family member who knows the beneficiary well
- Complex distribution needs — situations requiring highly customized trust terms
- Estate planning integration — when the trust is part of a comprehensive family plan
Finding a Pooled Trust
Pooled trusts are offered by nonprofit organizations, often affiliated with disability advocacy groups. Most states have at least one; some have several. To find programs:
- Check your state guide for local pooled trust programs
- Contact The Arc in your state — many chapters operate pooled trusts
- Ask disability attorneys in your area for recommendations
- National programs (like the National ABLE Alliance) may also offer pooled trust options
Questions to Ask Before Enrolling
- What are the enrollment fees and ongoing administrative costs?
- What is the minimum initial deposit?
- How are distribution requests handled, and how quickly?
- What investment options are available?
- What happens to remaining funds at the beneficiary’s death?
- Can I name remainder beneficiaries (for third-party sub-accounts)?
- What happens if the nonprofit dissolves?
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I use a pooled trust and an ABLE account together?
Yes. The pooled trust handles larger or long-term assets, while the ABLE account provides debit-card access for everyday qualified expenses. The pooled trust can even fund the ABLE account within annual contribution limits.
How do pooled trust fees compare to individual trust trustee fees?
Pooled trusts typically charge a combination of enrollment fees ($0–$1,500), annual administrative fees (often a flat fee or percentage of the sub-account), and sometimes per-distribution fees. For smaller accounts, this is usually cheaper than a professional trustee’s 1-2% annual fee on an individual trust. For larger accounts, the math may favor an individual trust.
Can a pooled trust be used for someone who isn’t on SSI or Medicaid?
Yes — pooled trusts can serve anyone with a disability, regardless of current benefit status. They’re often used proactively to protect assets in case benefits are needed in the future.
Back to the Complete SNT Guide
Written by a special needs parent. Not legal advice. Last updated February 2026.
Ready to take action? Your state guide has pooled trust programs and attorney resources specific to your state.
