Seasonal
Solutions: The Stages of Life & Estate Planning
Life is lived in stages. And the rhythm of our lives mirrors the rhythm of the natural seasons. Whether you are in the spring, summer, autumn or winter of life,
your Life & Estate Planning objectives will inevitably change. This article is relevant regardless of whether you currently have a Life & Estate plan. If you do not have a Life & Estate
Plan, it will help you appreciate the need for proper planning. If you already have a Life & Estate Plan, it will reinforce the need to keep your Plan up-to-date as you move through the
seasons.
Spring: Estate Planning for New Adults
In the context of Life & Estate Planning, spring begins on your 18th birthday. On that magical day you become responsible for your own personal,
health care and financial decisions. The adults in your life suddenly become your peers in a legal sense.
Unless you give your parents proper legal authority in advance, they cannot make your personal, health care or financial decisions on your behalf should you become
incapacitated due to an injury or an illness. For example, they would not be able to select a rehabilitation setting for you, have access to your medical records, represent your interests
regarding the course of your treatment or even file your income tax return. The failure to make proper legal plans in advance could force you and your parents into the Incapacity Probate
process by default, because these decisions must be made even if you are unable to make them yourself. Making proper legal plans now could avoid creating potential problems for your
parents later.
Summer: Estate Planning for Married Couples and Parents
As you grow older, you may get married. It has been said that a marriage may be made in Heaven, but the maintenance must be done on earth. As part of your
marital maintenance, you should review and update your Life & Estate Plan. For instance, your legal plans should be updated to appoint your spouse as the primary decision-maker for
personal, health care and financial decisions. In addition, make sure that your separate and mutual assets would be distributed as desired should either spouse predecease, or in the event
of your simultaneous deaths.
First comes love, then comes marriage, often followed by a baby carriage. If you have children, make sure your legal plans are updated to appoint back-up parents should your
minor children be left without parents.
Autumn: Preserving Your Financial Legacy
When your children become adults, you may wish to update your legal plans and appoint your children as secondary decision-makers should your spouse be unable to
serve. This can be accomplished through the terms of a Revocable Living Trust, or with Durable Powers of Attorney.
Consider creating Long-Term Discretionary Trusts for your children to protect their inheritance both from them and for them. Otherwise, your financial legacy could be lost to
squandering, divorces, lawsuits and bankruptcies.
While you are at it, consider including remarriage protection provisions in your legal plans to protect your children’s inheritance in the event you predecease your spouse and
he or she remarries. Otherwise, a new spouse (and their children) could inherit what you had intended for your own children.
Do you own a family business? To preserve both the business and your family relationships, proper business succession planning is a must.
Winter: Consider Your Charitable Legal Plans
Through advanced legal planning, you can even disinherit the IRS and leave more wealth to your descendants by maximizing the Generation-Skipping Transfer Tax
Exemption available under the Internal Revenue Code.
Assuming you have made proper legal plans for the distribution of your financial legacy to your loved ones, have you made proper legal plans for the distribution of your
charitable legacy to your favorite causes and institutions? In fact, many of the charitable legal plans available can help you increase your current income and offer valuable tax
deductions!
Be sure to seek appropriate legal counsel to ensure compliance with tax laws.
The Three P's
of Proper Estate Planning
If you were incapacitated or died today, what would happen to your loved ones and your property? Who would assume responsibility to make sure everything is okay? How would anyone know
your plans for the care of your loved ones and your property?
Even if you have answered these fundamental questions through proper estate planning, it is important to review your answers periodically, because they may change over time. To help
ensure that your planning and reviews are thorough, remember to cover the Three P’s of proper estate planning: People, Property and Plans.
Your People: Estate Planning for the People in Your Life
From the time we are born until we die, our life experience is enriched by the relationships we develop with other people. Truly, none of us is an island. Who are the important people
in your life right now? Depending on your unique circumstances, your list may include your spouse, children, grandchildren (even great-grandchildren), parents, siblings, nephews, nieces
and/or friends. Beyond these, your important people also may include religious and non-religious charities. Don’t forget any pets, whether they have feathers, fins or fur.
Your Property: Planning for the Distribution of Assets and Real Estate
In addition to collecting relationships with other people during our lifetimes, we tend to collect relationships with property along the way. In this context, property encompasses more
than just real property (i.e., real estate), including all of your assets regardless of form. What property have you accumulated? Have you inventoried and valued your things, or will you
send your loved ones on a very unpleasant and lengthy treasure hunt?
Your Plans: Appointing Successor Trustees in Your Estate Plan
The foundation of every comprehensive estate plan is the selection and appointment of your successor decision-makers to make your personal, health care and financial decisions in the
event of your incapacity. Likely such successors would continue to manage your property following your death as well.
Whom have you appointed as your successor decision-makers? Do they have the time and expertise to serve? Would it be wise to appoint professional assistance to help them with the
details? Perhaps a professional successor decision-maker, such as a trust company or a certified public accountant, is more appropriate given your unique circumstances.
Issues surrounding the division and distribution of property can shipwreck family relationships upon the death of the property owner. Do you have sentimental, one-of-a-kind items? A
recent study found that most family fall-outs result over the failure to make legal arrangements for the distribution of such items.
In conclusion, time spent on your Three P’s will be time well spent. Poor (or non-existent) inheritance planning can cause the loss of a family business, blended family brawls,
affluenza among idle heirs (along with their divorces, lawsuits and bankruptcies) and unnecessary dissipation of your life’s work due to avoidable estate taxes.
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