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Don't
Lose Your Inheritance to Uncle Sam
If
you are draggingyour
heels on this, you should know what is at risk. Without
proper planning, estates can be eaten away by bad
planning in ways ranging from the simple to the complex.
They include:
Failure
to leave a will. Most Americans know what
a will is. So why won’t they take the time to make
one? The estimated numbers of Americans without any
kind of will is staggering—60% to 70%. Yet without
a will in place, some or all of a person’s estate
may be transferred to probate court and a complete
stranger assigned to decide the future of the deceased’s
assets. If you are a parent, make a will. These days,
consumer software programs offer will kits that conform
to legal language in each state and are legally binding
and inexpensive to complete. They also prompt you
to do health
care and other directives necessary for a complete
estate plan.
No
plan for incapacity. An 80-year-old grandmother
sinks into dementia.
A 30-year-old father of twins is left in a coma after
a car accident. Anyone can be left incapacitated at
any age with no clear game plan for spouses or heirs.
This wastes both money and time, not to mention creating
great emotional hardship. The Terri Schiavo situation
was a wake-up call to many families; individuals realized
they had left incomplete instructions for their health
care wishes in case of temporary or long-term disability.
Advance health care directives designate health care
decision makers and delineate their powers, leaving
very precise instructions about life support and other
treatment options. Some individuals underscore written
directives by videotaping themselves giving these
instructions. Powers of attorney can also be created
to assign financial decision makers to the situation.
Failure
to coordinate or update beneficiaries.
Any child who has struggled to settle a parent’s estate
is very likely to have had problems with beneficiary
designations on retirement accounts, investments,
insurance policies, savings accounts, and bonds. Many
people think that beneficiary designation occurs at
the creation of the will—that's not true. Beneficiary
designations should be reviewed every few years for
accuracy or when a major life event requires a change.
Failure
to inventory. Parents may think they’ve
got a great system for organizing their investments
and estate instructions. But if they die or are incapacitated,
heirs may find it difficult to navigate their bookkeeping
system or find key documents and investments left
inside the house or in safe deposit boxes elsewhere.
Financial advisors can provide a centralized system
of organization for clients by keeping a separate
index of those materials to help guide family members
and heirs through a serious illness or estate settlement.
Failure to find key documents may lead to severe tax
consequences later.
No
attention to special situations. If both
parents die, how will substantial assets or life insurance
proceeds be managed for minor children? If there is
an adult child with a disability, is a special-needs
trust
or other directive in place? If a parent, friend,
or sibling dies without instructions for his pet,
who will get Fido? A person’s last wishes are as unique
as that person is, and personal wishes should be considered
part of the estate-planning
process. Heirs should insist on those provisions so
they can distribute assets with maximum speed and
minimum disagreement.
No
power of attorney or inadequate joint name provisions.
Incapacitated relatives not only need someone properly
designated in his or her directives, but they also
need that person to have proper access to funds. To
provide for this, a durable power of attorney can
be filed with the account custodian, or joint names
can be listed on the accounts so bills can be paid.
Naming a joint owner to an account may cause negative
consequences, so consult your financial or tax professional
before doing this.
Failure
to update. Anytime there’s a divorce, a
change in permanent residence, or a major life transition,
it’s time to review the estate plan. Remember to contact
both me as their financial advisor, and a legal professional,
when these changes take place. Both perspectives are
necessary.
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