An Elder Law Attorney’s Perspective on Estate Planning
Four Things to Focus On
I. Get Your Estate Plan in Order – Six Easy Steps
- List what you own today
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- How each asset is titled
- Name of beneficiary, if any
- Value of each asset
- Income tax basis of each asset, if not in retirement account
- Include retirement accounts and life insurance death benefits
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- Decide where you want your assets to go if you were not living today
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- Family – spouse, children, grandchildren, siblings, etc.
- Charities
- Friends
- Other people or entitles
- How much money or what percentage of total assets to each?
- Where should it go if a person you choose does not survive you?
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- How do you want each beneficiary to receive your assets?
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- Only two options:
- Outright, with no restrictions, or
- In trust – many different options
- How to choose:
- Need to protect inheritance FROM the beneficiary?
- Need to protect inheritance FOR the beneficiary?
- Only two options:
- What process do you want to use to transfer assets?
- Only Two options:
- Probate (court oversight) – Last Will and Testament controls
- Avoid Probate – only three ways
- Joint with right of survivorship
- Assets transfer to surviving owner outright (not in trust)
- Other owner(s) must survive you
- Makes other person owner with you now; this is risky
- Beneficiary designation / Transfer on Death / Pay on Death
- Assets must be distributed outright (not in trust)
- Recipient must survive you
- Joint with right of survivorship
- Revocable Living Trust
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- Assets can be distributed outright or in trust
- You can control where your property goes if recipient does not survive you
- Beneficiary designation can distribute to this trust
5. | Fund your estate plan | |
A. Title all assets correctly | ||
B. Name correct beneficiaries | ||
6. | Coordinate all documents, asset titling, and beneficiary designations so your | |
plan is carried out, and review every 3 to 5 years to keep current. | ||
II. | Plan for Your Potential Future Incapacity | |
1. | Without proper planning a guardian & conservator must be appointed for you | |
2. | Can avoid guardianship & conservatorship with a Durable Power of Attorney | |
A. They must be signed while you have intellectual capacity | ||
1) Legal and Financial (General) | ||
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III. | Do You Want to Be Kept Artificially Alive on Life Support? | |
1. | You need an Advance Directive – no matter what your answer. | |
A. Two kinds:
1) Instructive (stand-alone) – Living Will, Health Care Treatment Directive – Must follow decision of physician |
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2) Proxy (inside Health Care Durable Power of Attorney) | ||
a) If physician says you have crossed the line, then people | ||
you nominate can decide what and when to stop | ||
2. | If you want artificially supplied nutrition and hydration (feeding tubes) stopped, you | |
must explicitly say so in the document | ||
3. | Talk to your family and people named in your Advance Directive/Health Care | |
Durable Power of Attorney | ||
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IV. | Plan for Your Potential Need for Long-Term Care | |
1. | You will need income and/or assets that can be liquidated to pay for long-term care | |
If not sufficient, consider purchasing long-term care insurance | ||
2. | Don=t plan to qualify for Medicaid unless you have to; it is there as a last resort, not | |
a life goal | ||
3. | Make sure your estate planning documents are flexible so they can be adapted | |
and changed as circumstances and laws change. This includes powers to transfer | ||
assets, establish and/or amend trusts, and spend money in a manner that benefits | ||
you and protects assets for Medicaid eligibility, if that becomes necessary. | ||
4. | Plan for adequate and appropriate housing for you and dependents. Where can | |
you age in place as long as possible? |