Five Estate Blunders
When
you hear the words estate planning, what mental images do you see? Do you see beautiful, tanned people with incredible wealth, living in enormous mansions, riding in shiny
limousines and boarding private jets bound for exotic destinations? If so, then you are only partially correct. In reality, everyone has an estate worth planning. Some estates just are
more complex than others. In this article we will review five basic estate blunders common to princes and to paupers alike.
#1 Incapacity Issues
On your 18th birthday you are considered an adult American citizen and you become responsible for your own personal, health care and financial decisions. Even
your parents become strangers to you, in a legal sense, should you become incapacitated. This same legal strangerhood applies, by the way, between spouses.
As a result, every adult American, married or single, should appoint agents through proper Durable Powers Of Attorney to make their personal, health care and financial
decisions in the event of their incapacity. Alternatively, a court process involving at least three lawyers may be required to appoint agents for you, with ongoing court supervision. This
can be both invasive and expensive.
#2 Minor Children Matters
Silver and gold aside, if you are blessed with children, then they are your most valuable assets … even if you feel like trading them for S & H Green Stamps at
times. If your minor children were orphaned, who would rear them to adulthood and impart your morals and values to them? Only through a Last Will & Testament can you appoint the
appropriate guardians (i.e., back-up parents) for your minor children. Alternatively, a court process would be required to appoint them. This process is not only expensive and public, but
the court may not appoint the same parties you would have selected.
#3 Death & Taxes
Death is a certainty. When it comes to transferring your earthly possessions upon your death, you can either make it easy on your loved ones through proper
estate planning, or you can leave it up to the court system by default. Prior planning is, without fail, the more efficient and effec-tive option. There are a variety of planning methods
to accomplish this transfer. For example, Revocable Living Trusts are commonly used to transfer assets post-mortem, independent of the legal system in many states.
Taxes are the other certainty of life, as Benjamin Franklin so aptly observed. That said, proper estate planning can save hundreds of thousands of dollars from unnecessary
federal estate taxes. If you are married, is your estate plan taking full advantage of your available estate tax exemption through a combination Credit Shelter/QTIP Marital Trust?
#4 Inheritance Risks
No one values the worth of a dollar like the person who earned it and paid taxes on it. Have you arranged your estate to impart your work ethic to the next
generation and beyond? Careful consideration should be given, therefore, to protecting and preserving an inheritance through one or more Long-Term Discretionary Trusts for your
loved ones. Properly structured, such trusts will protect and preserve an inheritance for generations to come from squandering, divorces, lawsuits and bankruptcies. Without proper estate
planning, a lifetime of thrift can disappear in a season of conspicuous consumption, or through common personal misfortune.
#5 Procrastination Perils
Some 58 percent of adult Americans lack even a basic will* (and many others have an outdated plan that no longer meets their needs**). Simple
procrastination is the primary reason. Sadly, as a result, these otherwise responsible adult Americans may leave a legacy of unnecessary pain and conflict for their loved ones.
* Lawyers.com study (May, 2004)
** Anecdotal experience
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