Kristen R. Testaverde, Esq. krtestaverde@gmail.com
The New Year is a great time to evaluate your estate plan. Take a look at these 5 Estate Planning Resolutions as goals for the upcoming year.
1. Consider your estate. Everyone needs an estate plan. Take some time to consider what you would want from your estate plan. Make a list of your assets and liabilities. Married? Discuss with your spouse what would happen if something happened to one of you. Have minor children? Consider who would be their guardian in the event you were unable to care for them.
2. Get a Will and Other Estate Planning Documents. Your will is where you will determine how your assets are distributed after death. It also appoints your personal representative to carry out the tasks of your will. The will is also the place to appoint guardians for minor children. Already have a will? Review it to make sure it reads the way you desire.
In addition to your will, consider a health care proxy and power of attorney. These documents are extremely important in the event you become incapacitated. Executing these documents now can ensure that the person you would want to make medical and financial decisions is there in your place. Further, these documents can save thousands of dollars by avoiding the court process to appoint a guardian or conservator.
3. Consider a Trust. Consider a trust as part of your estate plan. Trusts are not just for the very wealthy. A trust is a method of managing property both during one’s lifetime and after death. Trusts can also help to avoid the probate process and place assets in the hands of beneficiaries much more quickly, saving time and money. Have a child with special needs? Consider a supplemental needs trust to ensure his or her needs are met without jeopardizing your child’s eligibility for government benefits.
4. Review beneficiary designations. Have life insurance? A retirement plan? Take a moment to review the beneficiary designations. This can be easily done by visiting your human resources department. Make sure these designations appoint the beneficiaries you would like. A few tips: Do not appoint yourself. When you pass on, these items pass to your probate estate and are subject to the probate process, rather than directly to beneficiaries. Also, do not name one person with the expectation this person will distribute the funds to others, such as one child for the others. You could cause the named beneficiary tax consequences and/or subject the funds to that person’s creditors.
5. Secure your documents. Store the documents in a safe place. This place should be secure, fireproof, but also accessible to the individuals you would like to have access to it. For example, a fireproof safe in your home is ideal. A safe deposit box however, if in your name alone, would require access by your personal representative, appointed in the document locked in the box.
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