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Estate Planning for the Other 99.9%

Other planning areas that may address your needs:

  1. Special Needs Planning

    A Special Needs Trust allows a parent, grandparent or guardian to provide funds for a child with a disability without disrupting the child’s eligibility for government aid.

  2. Charitable Planning

    A charity can be the beneficiary of a revocable or irrevocable trust. A Charitable Lead Trust allows you to provide a payout to charities during your lifetime. A Charitable Remainder Trust allows you and/or another beneficiary to receive payments during your lifetime and give a portion of the assets to one or more charities.

  3. Business Succession Planning:

    A series of logistical and financial decisions about who will take over a business upon retirement, death or disability.

Through all the changes to the estate tax landscape, the basics of estate planning have been unaffected and still hold true.

You should always include the following:

  1. Will

    The primary document used to ensure that property and assets are distributed according to the individual’s wants.

  2. Living Trust

    A legal document through which assets are placed into a trust during an individual’s lifetime, then transferred to the designated beneficiaries at their death. It is revocable during the individual’s lifetime.

  3. Durable Power of Attorney for Healthcare

    A power of attorney named that has authority to oversee your medical care and make health care decisions for you if you are unable to do so.

  4. Durable Power of Attorney for Finances

    A power of attorney you prepare that gives someone the authority to handle financial transactions on your behalf if you become incapacitated.