Special Needs Trust Tax Calculator 2026 β€” SNT Tax & Benefit Impact

Calculate special needs trust income tax at compressed trust rates, DNI distributions to beneficiary, Medicaid payback for first-party trusts, and SSI benefit impact. First-party vs third-party comparison.

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Amount trustee plans to distribute this year
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Total annual SSDI/SSI and other income (not trust distributions)
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Distributions for food/shelter reduce SSI by up to $322/mo (2026)
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Total Medicaid expenditures β€” payback upon beneficiary death

Trust Tax Calculation

Beneficiary Impact Summary

How Special Needs Trust Taxation Works

A Special Needs Trust (SNT) is an irrevocable trust designed to hold assets for a disabled beneficiary while preserving eligibility for government benefits (SSI, Medicaid). The tax treatment depends on whether the trust is a grantor trust (income taxed to grantor) or a non-grantor trust (trust files its own return at compressed trust rates).

2026 Trust Tax Brackets (Non-Grantor):
0–$3,100: 10% | $3,100–$11,150: 24% | $11,150–$15,200: 35% | Over $15,200: 37%

Trust Taxable Income = Trust Income βˆ’ Deductions βˆ’ DNI Distributed
Beneficiary Taxable Income = min(DNI, Distributions)
SSI Impact of Support Distributions: Reduces SSI by lesser of (1/3 FBR + $20) or actual value
Medicaid Payback (1st-party): Full Medicaid expenditures before any other distribution
Example β€” Third-Party SNT, $500K corpus, $20K income, $15K distributions:
DNI: $20,000 (assuming all income is DNI)
Deduction for distributions: $15,000
Trust taxable income: $20,000 βˆ’ $15,000 = $5,000 β†’ trust tax ~$722
Beneficiary reports $15,000 as income (DNI carry-out)
Key: Distributing $5K more saves $722 in trust tax (37% rate) vs paying it in trust
Extended

SNT Distribution Optimizer

Model distributions to minimize SSI/Medicaid loss while meeting beneficiary needs. Multi-year DNI tracking with SVG chart.

Model trust distributions over multiple years to minimize SSI/Medicaid impact while meeting beneficiary needs. Adjust the distribution mix to find the optimal strategy.

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Recreation, technology, transportation β€” no SSI impact
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Food/shelter β€” reduces SSI by up to $322/month (2026)
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2026 federal SSI FBR: $943/month (individual)

Trust Corpus vs Optimal vs Over-Distribution Comparison

Trust Balance (Optimal) Trust Balance (Over-Distribution) SSI Preserved (Optimal)

Multi-Year DNI & SSI Impact Tracker

YearTrust BalanceTrust IncomeDistributionsTrust TaxSSI ReductionBeneficiary NetsOver-Dist Trust

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between a first-party and third-party special needs trust?
A First-Party SNT (also called a d4A self-settled trust or d4C pooled trust) is funded with the beneficiary's own assets β€” typically a personal injury settlement, inheritance, or other windfall. Federal law (42 USC Β§1396p(d)(4)(A)) requires a Medicaid payback provision: when the beneficiary dies, Medicaid must be repaid before any other beneficiaries receive assets. A Third-Party SNT is funded with assets belonging to someone else (parents, grandparents, other relatives). It does NOT require a Medicaid payback provision β€” all remaining assets pass to other heirs or charities upon the beneficiary's death.
How are distributions from a special needs trust taxed?
The trust itself is a taxpaying entity subject to compressed trust tax rates (37% on income over $15,200 in 2026). To reduce taxes, trustees often distribute trust income to the beneficiary, who may be in a much lower bracket. Distributions carry out Distributable Net Income (DNI) β€” the beneficiary pays tax on the distributed DNI (typically up to their ordinary income tax bracket), while the trust deducts amounts distributed. Distributions for support needs (food, clothing, shelter) can reduce SSI benefits dollar-for-dollar and may affect Medicaid eligibility.
How does an SNT affect SSI and Medicaid eligibility?
The key rule is that trust distributions must be for "supplemental" needs β€” not basic support needs that SSI and Medicaid are designed to cover. Distributions for supplemental needs (recreation, education, transportation, equipment, vacations) do NOT count as income for SSI purposes. Distributions for in-kind support and maintenance (food, shelter, clothing) are counted as in-kind income and reduce SSI by up to 1/3 of the federal SSI benefit rate. Proper SNT drafting and trustee decision-making are critical to preserving government benefits.
What is the trust tax rate in 2026 and why does it matter for SNTs?
In 2026, non-grantor trusts reach the top 37% federal income tax bracket at only $15,200 of taxable income. This is extremely compressed compared to individual brackets β€” a single individual reaches 37% only at $626,350. For SNTs with significant investment income, this creates strong incentive to distribute income to the beneficiary (who may be in a much lower bracket) rather than accumulate it in the trust. However, the trustee must balance tax efficiency against SSI/Medicaid impact of distributions.
What is the Medicaid payback requirement for first-party SNTs?
Under 42 USC Β§1396p(d)(4)(A), a first-party (d4A) SNT must include a provision stating that upon the beneficiary's death, Medicaid receives reimbursement for all medical assistance paid on the beneficiary's behalf before any other distributions from the trust. The Medicaid payback amount equals all Medicaid expenditures made during the beneficiary's lifetime in the states where services were received. Only assets remaining after Medicaid payback pass to other heirs. Third-party SNTs have no payback requirement β€” all remaining assets pass to chosen beneficiaries.