Legally, you have the right to draft your own documents; however, that doesn’t mean you have the right to have them actually work. Do-it-yourselfers accidentally disinherit children, fail to protect assets from lawsuits, trigger probate, invite court interference, give assets outright to a drug addicted beneficiaries, and incur huge fees to straighten out a big mess.
Creating an effective set of estate planning documents involves many moving parts and deep analysis. An estate planning attorney will consider your family situation and financial status coupled with where you live and where you own real estate. Your goals and concerns are also carefully considered.
With a myriad of variables at play, how can a book of generic forms, computer program, or website possibly address all correctly? It simply can’t.
Even attorneys, who don’t focus on estate planning, are hesitant to write their own estate plans. Instead, they turn to their colleagues who understand probate and trust laws and are experienced in putting together estate plans that work.
BLOG
Supreme Court Rules That Inherited IRAs Are Not Protected in Bankruptcy
The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that inherited IRAs are not protected in bankruptcy like those that you set up and fund yourself. The Court noted that true IRA owners are subject to penalties designed to encourage them to keep the money available for retirement. These penalties justify the “retirement funds” exemption for true IRA owners. Because money in an inherited IRA allows easy penalty free withdrawals, the Court held that the “retirement funds” exemption does not apply. This will likely make spousal rollovers more popular. A spouse who inherits an IRA has the ability to roll the assets into her own IRA to maximize tax savings and have the protection of the “retirement funds” bankruptcy exemption. If the spouse chooses not to rollover, the account is considered an inherited IRA and those assets would not be protected in bankruptcy.
One option to protect inherited IRAs is a Standalone Retirement Trust. If you would like more information about Standalone Retirement Trusts, please call our office.
Estate Planning Basics for Newlyweds – How to Get Prepared for the Unexpected
It’s that time of year – the time for beautiful weddings, fun receptions, delicious cakes, special gifts, and romantic honeymoons. While this is a joyous time for everyone, it’s also time for you and your new spouse to plan for your future – for richer or for poorer, in sickness and in health.
Why Newlyweds Need to Plan Their Estates
Why should newlyweds care about estate planning? Because everyone – young or old, married or single – needs to protect themselves and those they love. Unfortunately, many couples spend more time planning their honeymoon than they do planning the best way to protect each other.
What Happens Without an Estate Plan?
This fallout of becoming incapacitated or dying without an estate plan is serious, expensive, and painful. It often causes financial ruin and family discord, lasting for generations.
Without an estate plan:
- You will leave your spouse and the rest of your family in the dark – they won’t know what you would want to happen if you became incapacitated or died. This often leads to family fights as each individual champions for what she thinks you would have wanted.
- You’ll leave a huge burden on your loved ones to make tough decisions about medical heroics and the withdrawal of life support.
- The court or state law, not you, will decide who makes health care decisions if you are unable to make those decisions yourself.
- A judge, not you, will decide who raises your children.
- The court can lock down your assets so even your spouse has to get court permission before making a financial move.
- Any assets you leave to loved ones can be taken by their divorcing spouses, bankruptcy creditors, medical crisis creditors, predators, and frivolous lawsuits.
- You may accidentally disinherit your spouse and your children.
- Your beloved pet could end up in a shelter or euthanized.
What Should You Do?
We invite you and your new spouse to telephone our office to set up a meeting. We’ll walk you through how to protect each other and those you love; how to protect your beloved pets; and how to protect your assets and make things easier for you and your families. Call now; we look forward to hearing from you.
Who Needs an Estate Plan?
The Key Takeaways
- Every adult, regardless of age or wealth, needs both a lifetime plan and an after-death estate plan.
- Planning for incapacity will keep you in control and let your trusted loved ones care for you without court interference – and without the loss of control and expense of a guardianship or conservatorship proceeding.
- Every adult needs up-to-date health care directives.
- You need to leave written instructions to make sure you are the one who selects who’s in charge of when and how your assets will be distributed.
- We all need the counseling and assistance of an experienced estate planning attorney.
What is an Estate Plan?
Your estate is comprised of the assets you own—your car, home, bank accounts, investments, life insurance, furniture and personal belongings. No matter how large or how small your estate, you can’t take it with you when you die, and you probably want certain people to have certain things you own.
To make sure that happens, you need to provide written instructions stating who you want to receive your assets and belongings, what you want them to receive, and when they are to receive it—that is the essence of an estate plan. If you have young children, you will need to name someone to raise them in your place and to manage their inheritance.
A properly prepared estate plan also will have instructions for your care (and the management of your assets) if you become incapacitated, even for a short time, due to illness or injury. Without the proper documents in place, your family will have to ask the court for permission to use your assets to take care of you and to oversee your care. That process is out of your control and it takes time and costs money, making an already difficult situation even more difficult for your family.
It might surprise you, but having a plan in place often means more to families with modest means because 1) they can least afford to pay unnecessary court costs and legal fees and 2) state laws, which take over in the absence of planning, often distribute assets in an undesirable way.
What You Need to Know
Don’t try to do this yourself. You need the counseling and assistance of an experienced estate planning attorney who knows the laws in your state and has the expertise to guide you in making difficult decisions such as who will raise your children and who will look after your care at incapacity. That attorney will also know how to carefully craft the appropriate estate planning documents, so that what you think will happen when you become incapacitated or die actually happens.
Actions to Consider
- Call or email our office now to set up an estate planning consultation appointment. We make tough topics easy to talk about.
- Don’t worry about how life will unfold; the best practice is to have your plan prepared now based on your current situation.