Solidly Single
If you are single, you are
in good company. Nearly half of all adult Americans are single. Being single can mean considerable personal and economic freedom. Nevertheless, just like your married counterparts, proper
Life & Estate Planning is necessary to keep you in control.
Incapacity & The Law
Every adult American is responsible for making his or her own personal, health care and financial decisions. In fact, you may take many basic decisions for
granted. For example, you decide where to live, what medical care is appropriate and how to manage your finances. But what if an illness or injury leaves you unable to make even these
basic decisions? Who will make such decisions for you? Who will have your best interests at heart?
Proper Life & Estate Planning is required in advance of your incapacity, if you want to appoint your own decision-maker. Otherwise, by default you may find
yourself in the Probate Court in a legal process that typically employs three lawyers and makes your private personal, health care and financial circumstances a matter of public record.
Minor Children
Do you have minor children (i.e., under age 18 in most states)? If so, you probably invest considerable time and money to provide them with a moral, safe, and
secure home environment. What if you died while they were still minors? Who would rear them to adulthood? Who would provide the moral, safe, and secure home environment? Unless you want a
Probate Judge to make the selection for you, proper Life & Estate Planning is required.
Who will manage the inheritance you leave for your minor children until they reach adulthood? Again, that decision will be made by a Probate Judge in the absence
of proper estate planning by you.
What if you are divorced? Absent a showing of unfitness, the Probate Court will appoint the surviving biological parent not only to rear the children to adulthood,
but also to manage their inheritance. Even worse, if the surviving biological parent then survives your children, they ultimately may receive the inheritance ... along with their new
spouse and stepchildren!
Your Valuables
Is family harmony important to you? Whether it is grandma's yellow pie pan, antique furniture or that Civil War sword, such items should be identified
in your Life & Estate Plan along with the designated recipient of your own selection. Otherwise, your valuables could end up in the hands of the wrong loved one or sold to a perfect
stranger in your Estate Sale. Either way, relationships between and among your loved ones could be bruised or battered unnecessarily.
Death, Taxes & Trusts
Benjamin Franklin noted that there are only two certainties in life: Death & Taxes. While there is little we can do to avoid the former, proper
estate tax planning can minimize the latter. One of the best kept secrets for reducing Federal Estate Taxes is giving while you are living. Such giving leverages the Annual Gift
Exclusion (AGE) that is available to every taxpayer.
Under the AGE, each taxpayer may give $12,000 each year to as many people as they wish. This wealth transfer does not trigger gift taxes to the donor or to the
donee. Additionally, any future increase in the value of the gifted asset is not included in the donor's estate for determining Federal Estate Taxes later on. For this reason, gifts of
appreciated assets (e.g., stock that is rapidly going up in value) are popular. [Note: Legal counsel should be sought before making AGE gifts because of important capital gains
considerations.]
Are your likely beneficiaries young, inexperienced or irresponsible? If so, various Trusts can be created to protect your AGE gifts from their potential divorces,
lawsuits, bankruptcies and good, old-fashioned squandering. Through carefully drafted Trusts you can control how and when the gifted assets are made available to your beneficiaries. As
legendary jurist Oliver Wendell Holmes put it: Put not your trust in money, but put your money in trust.
Premarital Priorities
Are you or
someone you know planning to get married? If so, you should consider some of the important financial and legal consequences of exchanging vows before the big day.
Premarital Agreements
Whether you are single, widowed or divorced, you might want to consider executing a Premarital Agreement with your intended before you say I do. Legally
speaking, a Premarital Agreement is a two-party contract made in contemplation of marriage and is effective upon solemnization of the marriage. Practically speaking, it allows prospective
spouses to lay their financial cards on the table and agree in advance to such things as:
- Asset ownership during the marriage;
- Asset disposition upon death;
- Asset division upon divorce; and
- Spousal support.
To help ensure that your Premarital Agreement withstands future legal challenges to its terms, be sure to dot the i's and cross the t's. Here
are some points to remember:
- Provide full, written disclosure of all assets by both parties;
- Provide adequate time for negotiation and reflection well in advance of the wedding day;
- Make sure the Agreement is entered into voluntarily and the provisions are not unconscionable or unfair;
- Make sure each party understands the provisions; and
- Make sure each party has independent legal representation.
While perhaps not very romantic, a properly drafted Premarital Agreement can protect family wealth and the interests of other family members in such wealth
(e.g., family business ownership). In some circumstances, it also can help determine whether money is a primary motivating factor in the relationship before it is too late. Love may be
blind, but you should approach marriage with both eyes wide open.
Yours, Mine & Ours
If your marriage would create a Blended Family, then careful estate planning is required to reach often-competing goals. For example, how will you
provide for the financial needs of your surviving spouse during their lifetime and for your own children?
Careful coordination between your financial and estate planning is required. One possible strategy could be called the Triple Play. Here's how it works:
First, you and your spouse-to-be execute a Premarital Agreement identifying and separating your respective assets. This will allow each of you to retain control over their eventual
post-mortem disposition. Second, you create a QTIP Trust as part of your estate plan. Upon your death, this Trust will provide at least its net income on the assets it holds for
your surviving spouse. Upon their death, the assets are held and administered for your own children. Finally, a Life Insurance policy on your life will provide the funds needed to fuel the
QTIP Trust and/or Trusts for your own children upon your death. Why Life Insurance? Because it provides a known sum of cash when it is needed at an unknown time in the
future.
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