Estate Planning: Most People, Alas, Fail to Make Crucial Decisions
How best to put this delicately?
We're all going to go at some point, and - just because
you'd rather not think about it - doesn't make you somehow immune.
And then what?
Maybe you think your estate will all get miraculously sorted
out, and that squabbling relatives are only the stuff of TV dramas. But you're
not just leaving an estate. You're leaving what Ken Cella, an executive with
the financial services firm Edward Jones, calls "a legacy."
"You want to be the one who's in control of what
happens to what matters most to you, such as minor children, dependents,
financial assets, even your own health care decisions," he says.
"Without a properly planned estate, or legacy strategy, your assets could
be subject to the time-consuming, expensive and very public process where
relatives and creditors can gain access to records and even challenge your
will."
And yet, according to a recent survey by Edward Jones, while
77 percent of Americans believe having such a strategy in place is important
for everyone - not just the wealthy - only 24 percent have even taken the most
basic step of designating beneficiaries for all their accounts. To avoid one of
those "then what?" moments, here are some of the key elements to
consider:
A Will.
What's the worst that can happen if you haven't written one?
"Plenty," as US News & World Report has written, "depending
on your situation, the personalities of the people in your life - and the
estate laws that your state has on the books."
In other words, not only could some court judge be deciding
who gets everything down to your Beatles records if your family can't agree on
their own, but he or she could also wind up appointing a guardian for your
minor kids.
A Living Trust.
Do you own out-of-state property, a la a vacation home, say?
Or maybe you want to leave more to one child than the others? Assets you
register into a revocable living trust are there for your benefit during your
lifetime, can be managed by your named trustee if you become incapacitated, and
- here's the kicker - are harder to contest than wills.
A Health Care Directive.
The same way you don't want some judge deciding who gets
your Beatles albums, you definitely don't want the courts having to settle an
inter-family fight over whether you'd rather go on living in a vegetative state
or be taken off hospital feeding tubes.
And, yes, it's happened.
Shivering at the thought? Then you'll recognize the
importance of appointing someone to carry out your medical treatment wishes in
the even you're no longer able to communicate of incapable of giving consent.
Beneficiary Designations.
Suffice it to say you don't want to be among the 76 percent
the survey found hadn't even bothered, for starters, to fill in a beneficiary's
name on accounts like their 401(k) or other savings.
For some, estate planning is as simple as a written will.
But a financial advisor, like a local one at Edward Jones, can work with
you and your tax and legal professionals to employ a strategy that among other
things potentially avoids the court process known as probate - there, we said
the "P" word - while also making sure your investments are aligned
with your goals.
Article source: (NewsUSA)
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