
Losing Your
Inheritance to Uncle Sam – or Others
Successful estate
planning takes not one generation, but two. The first generation needs to
make a clear, sensible plan and the second needs to be involved in that
plan.
The best estate
strategies tend to be made with the advice of a financial adviser or an
estate planning attorney. 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 –
between 60-70 percent. Yet without a will in place, some or all of a
person’s estate may be transferred to Probate Court with 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 (see below) 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
money, time and creates great emotional hardship. Advance health care
directives designate health-care decision makers and delineate their
powers, and leave 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 --
not true. Beneficiary designations should be reviewed every few years for
accuracy or when a major life event requires a change.
Failure to
inventory: A parent 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 advisers 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 they are and 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: An
incapacitated relative not only needs someone properly designated in his
or her directives, but they 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 a good reason to review an estate plan. Enlist
your legal and financial planning professionals in this effort. Both
perspectives are necessary.
April 2007— This column is
produced by the Financial Planning Association, the membership
organization for the financial planning community, and is provided by
McGuire & Co., LLC, a local member of the FPA.
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