Philip Seymour Hoffman’s Will: 3 Critical Mistakes

Oscar-winning actor Philip Seymour Hoffman died from a drug overdose in February 2014. Sadly, he left behind three young children - and a fortune estimated to be worth $35 million. 

He was only 46. 

After his death, Mr. Hoffman’s Last Will and Testament was filed for probate.

 

  1. The Will is short – only 15 pages – and, it was signed on October 7, 2004, about a year and a half after the actor’s first child was born. 

  2. The Will leaves his entire estate to Marianne “Mimi” O’Donnell, a costume designer and the mother of all three of Mr. Hoffman’s children. 

  3. The couple never married and had separated in 2013 (due to Mr. Hoffman’s recurring drug problems). 

 

Estate Planning Mistake #1 – Using a Will:

Shortly after Mr. Hoffman’s Will was filed, The New York Post published it online and his final wishes instantlybecame public information.  

 

  • We know his request to have his son (the only child living when the Will was signed) raised in Manhattan, Chicago, or San Francisco so that he "will be exposed to the culture, arts and architecture that such cities offer." 

  • There is another way – a private way.  A Revocable Living Trust (as used by Elizabeth Taylor and Paul Walker) would have kept Mr. Hoffman’s final wishes a private matter.

 

Estate Planning Mistake #2 – Failing to Update His Estate Plan

Mr. Hoffman signed his Will in October 2004.

 

  1. During the next nine years, he had two daughters, won an Oscar for best actor for his performance in Capote, and amassed the majority of his fortune. 

  2. Considering Mr. Hoffman's well-documented, long-term struggle with drug addiction as well as the significant changes in his life and net worth during those nine years, it is surprising that he failed to update his estate plan. 

  3. At the very least, your estate plan should be reviewed every few years to insure that it still does what you want it to do and takes into consideration changes in your finances, your family, and the law.  

 

Estate Planning Mistake #3 – Ignoring a Trusted Advisor:

In probate court documents filed in July, it was revealed that Mr. Hoffman’s accountant repeatedly advised him to protect his children with a trust fund.  But the actor ignored this good advice. 

 

  1. With the terms of the old 2004 Will left unchanged, the estate will pass to Mr. Hoffman’s estranged girlfriend, outright and without any protections. 

  2. Nothing will go directly to his children. 

  3. Had Mr. Hoffman listened to his accountant and worked with an estate planning attorney, he could have established a lasting legacy for his children, protecting them and their inheritances. 

 

The take away from this tragedy is that proper planning is crucial to ensure the well being of your loved one’s after you are no longer around. While everyone believes that it, “won’t happen to me”, the reality is that it does. It happens to all of us, whether we are ready or not. For me, this is a perfect example of the importance of proper planning. Through proper planning you not only ensure that your wishes are carried out, but can rest easy knowing that you have taken every available step to plan for the inevitable. I believe in the adage: plan for the worst and hope for the best.

In summary, with the counseling and advice of an experienced estate planning attorney, you can avoid mistakes like Mr. Hoffman’s—and know that your loved ones will be properly cared for when the inevitable happens.

If you are interested in ensuring that your family is cared for after you have passed away, please call our office at 415-625-0773 to schedule your free estate planning consultation with San Francisco’s premiere estate planning attorney, Matthew J. Tuller.

How to Get Organized to Meet With Your Estate Planning Attorney

OK, great!  You’ve finally decided it’s time to meet with an estate planning attorney and get your affairs in order.  It’s time to make sure your family is protected. 

Now that you’ve scheduled the first appointment, what’s the next step? 

You can do one of two things: (1) Simply wait for the meeting date to arrive, or (2) Get yourself organized and prepared for the first meeting.

Before You Meet With Your Attorney:  3 Things—

Taking the time to sort through your important papers and get your thoughts in order will go a long way to making the meeting productive and valuable.  Otherwise, the meeting will become a fishing expedition for your attorney and both tedious and confusing for you. 

Here are 3 ways to get yourself organized and prepared for your first meeting:

1. Make a complete list of your assets and liabilities.  

  1. List what you own (e.g., bank accounts, investment accounts, real estate, retirement accounts, and life insurance).  Fortunately, you do not need to make a list of your personal property.

  2. List out how you own it (e.g., in your sole name or in joint names with your spouse or someone else such as a child or sibling).

  3. Indicate whether you have already designated a beneficiary for the account or policy.

  4. Record how much you owe (e.g., mortgages, car loans and credit cards).

2. Think about who you want to inherit your estate, when they’ll inherit it, and how they’ll inherit it.

There are many ways to pass your property to beneficiaries, including outright, in stages (such as after college or after getting married), at specific ages, or in lifetime discretionary trusts. 

It’s wise to consider the advice of your attorney, but, at the very least, think about each beneficiary’s current needs and what they may need in the future.

3. Think about who you want to be in charge if you become incapacitated or die. 

Along with naming Guardians for your minor children, deciding will serve as your fiduciaries (including the Executor of your Will, Successor Trustee of your Trust, Attorney in Fact of your Power of Attorney, and Health Care Agent in your Medical Directive) is, by far, the most important decision you will need to make. 

Why?  Because if you choose the wrong person for the job, or if someone you choose declines to serve or can’t serve, the estate plan that you have so carefully put together will come to a grinding halt. 

If you’re like most people, you’ll need the advice of your attorney to choose the right people or institutions to serve as your fiduciaries, but think about which family members or friends will be good candidates - and which will not. 

It’s a lot to think about and organize, but it will be well worth it.  You got this.

If you are interested in ensuring that your family is cared for after you have passed away, please call our office at 415-625-0773 to schedule your free estate planning consultation with San Francisco’s premiere estate planning attorney, Matthew J. Tuller.

Why Does Probate Take So Long?

Probate can be easily avoided, but most estates are dragged through the process.  Why?  Many people fail to create an estate plan, so probate is required.  And - others plan with just a Will, so probate is required.  As a result, assets end up at the mercy of a probate judge, open to public scrutiny, and delayed passing to beneficiaries.

Frustratingly, probate can drag on for months - or even years.  Here are some of the most common reasons why probate takes so long:

  1. Many Beneficiaries.  In general, estates with many beneficiaries take longer to probate than estates with just a few beneficiaries.

  2. Why? It takes time to communicate with each and every beneficiary and, if documents need to be signed, there are always beneficiaries who fail to return their signed documents in a timely manner.  Regardless of advances in modern technology and communications, it simply takes a long time to reach multiple beneficiaries, spread out across the United States or in a foreign country.

  3. Estate Tax Return. Estates, required to file an estate tax return at the state and/or federal level, are usually complicated.  And, the personal representative can’t make a final asset distribution until she is absolutely sure that the estate tax return has been accepted and the estate tax bill has been paid in full.  At the federal level, it can take up to a year before the IRS gets around to reviewing and accepting an estate tax return. 

  4. Angry Beneficiaries.   Nothing can drag out the probate process like a family feud. When beneficiaries don’t get along or won’t speak to each other, the personal representative may be forced to go to court to get permission to do just about everything.  That takes time.

  5. Incompetent Personal Representative.  A personal representative, who is not good with money, irresponsible, disorganized, or busy with his job or family, will drag probate on and on.  Why?  Because a personal representative must efficiently and effectively handle the responsibilities and duties that go along with serving.  It’s a lot of work.

What Can Be Done to Speed Up Probate?

The best way to speed up probate is to avoid it altogether.  Avoidance is the only way to eliminate probate delays.   If properly drafted and funded, a Revocable Living Trust will avoid probate perils, stresses, and delays. It’s easy.

If you are interested in ensuring that your family is cared for after you have passed away, please call our office at 415-625-0773 to schedule your free estate planning consultation with San Francisco’s premiere estate planning attorney, Matthew J. Tuller.

Will Your Revocable Living Trust Avoid Probate? It Depends.

Will Your Revocable Living Trust Avoid Probate? It Depends.

If you’ve set up a Revocable Living Trust, congratulations!  You’re definitely on the right track. But…you’re only half way there. Many believe because they took the time to create a Trust, their estate will automatically avoid probate.  Unfortunately, this is a false sense of security.

The key to probate avoidance is proper asset ownership, including the full funding of your Revocable Living Trust.

What are Probate Assets?

What assets require probate?

 

  1. Accounts and real estate titled in your sole, individual name [without a payable on death (POD) or transfer on death (TOD) designation]

  2. Accounts and real estate you own as a tenant in common

  3. Contract assets naming your estate as beneficiary

 

What Assets Avoid Probate?

 

  • What assets automatically avoid probate after you die and, therefore, do not need to be funded (or cannot be funded) into your trust? 

  • Accounts and real estate owned as joint tenants with rights of survivorship

  • Accounts and real estate owned as tenants by the entirety

  • Life insurance

  • Retirement accounts, including IRAs, 401(k) s, and annuities

  • Life estate property

  • Payable on death (POD) and transfer on death (TOD) accounts and, in some states, transfer on death or beneficiary deeds

 

What’s the Next Step?

Ask a qualified estate planning attorney to confirm that your Revocable Living Trust is fully funded and that all assets are aligned with your estate planning.  Proper asset ownership is key to probate avoidance.

If you are interested in ensuring that your family is cared for after you have passed away, please call our office at 415-625-0773 to schedule your free estate planning consultation with San Francisco’s premiere estate planning attorney, Matthew J. Tuller.

Should I Write My Own Will?

Personally, I believe in the adage: if it’s worth doing, it’s worth doing right. While this idea is applicable to most things in life, it especially true when it comes to the law, legal documents, and writing your own Will. Specifically, when you consider the importance of have a well drafted estate plan in place: ensuring that your family is cared for when you pass away. Saving money by writing your own estate plan is both a waste of money and time. A do-it-yourself Will/estate plan will not achieve the results you desire. The money saved by not hiring a lawyer to prepare your documents today will equate to a much greater cost when you die, because your estate will likely need to pass via probate (which costs between $9,000 and $19,000 depending on the value of your assets), and can easily lead to family disharmony.

What’s Wrong With Writing Your Own Estate Plan?

Legally, you have the right to draft your own documents; however, that doesn’t mean you have the right to have them actually work.  Do-it-yourselfers accidentally disinherit children, fail to protect assets from lawsuits, trigger probate, invite court interference, give assets outright to a drug addicted beneficiaries, and incur huge fees to straighten out a big mess.

Creating an effective set of estate planning documents involves many moving parts and deep analysis.  An estate planning attorney will consider your family situation and financial status coupled with where you live and where you own real estate.  Your goals and concerns are also carefully considered.

With a myriad of variables at play, how can a book of generic forms, computer program, or website possibly address all correctly?  It simply can’t. 

Even attorneys, who don’t focus on estate planning, are hesitant to write their own estate plans.  Instead, they turn to their colleagues who understand both probate and trust laws, and are experienced in putting together estate plans that work.

Use Books and Software to Learn About Estate Planning, Not for Estate Planning

Estate planning books and software should only be used as tools to learn about the estate planning process. They should not be used a substitute for the hands-on, legal counseling from an experienced estate planning attorney.

While there are many tasks you can complete on your own, designing, drafting, and implementing an estate plan is not one of them.

What’s the Biggest Problem With Do-It-Yourself Estate Planning?

The biggest problem with do-it-yourself estate planning is that it often creates a huge burden for loved ones.  It’s your loved ones who will find out you tried to save a few bucks and, as a result, caused a huge stressful mess that will cost thousands of dollars to fix.

If you are interested in ensuring that your family is cared for after you have passed away, please call our office at 415-625-0773 to schedule your free estate planning consultation with San Francisco’s premiere estate planning attorney, Matthew J. Tuller.

Estate Planning Basics for Newlyweds—How to Get Prepared for the Unexpected

It’s that time of year—the time for beautiful weddings, fun receptions, delicious cakes, special gifts, and romantic honeymoons.  While this is a joyous time for everyone, it’s also time for you and your new spouse to plan for your future – for richer or for poorer, in sickness and in health. 

Why Newlyweds Need to Plan Their Estates

Why should newlyweds care about estate planning?  Because everyone – young or old, married or single – needs to protect themselves and those they love.

Unfortunately, many couples spend more time planning their honeymoon than they do planning the best way to protect each other.   

What Happens Without an Estate Plan?

This fallout of becoming incapacitated or dying without an estate plan is serious, expensive, and painful.  It often causes financial ruin and family discord, lasting for generations. 

Without an estate plan

  1. You will leave your spouse and the rest of your family in the dark – they won’t know what you would want to happen if you became incapacitated or died.  This often leads to family fights as each individual vies for what he or she thinks you would have wanted.

  2. You’ll leave a huge burden on your loved ones to make tough decisions about medical heroics and the withdrawal of life support.

  3. The court or state law, not you, will decide who makes health care decisions if you are unable to make those decisions yourself.   

  4. A judge, not you, will decide who raises your children.

  5. The court can lock down your assets so even your spouse has to get court permission before making a financial move. 

  6. Any assets you leave to loved ones can be taken by their divorcing spouses, bankruptcy creditors, medical crisis creditors, predators, and frivolous lawsuits.

  7. You may accidentally disinherit your spouse and your children.

  8. Your beloved pet could end up in a shelter or euthanized.   

What Should You Do?

We invite you and your new spouse to telephone our office to set up a meeting.  We’ll walk you through how to protect each other and those you love; how to protect your beloved pets; and how to protect your assets and make things easier for you and your families.  Call now; we look forward to hearing from you.

If you are interested in ensuring that your family is cared for after you have passed away, please call our office at 415-625-0773 to schedule your free estate planning consultation with San Francisco’s premiere estate planning attorney, Matthew J. Tuller.

Parental Warning: If You Own Your Property this Way, You May Accidentally Disinherit Your Own Children

Owning property as Joint Tenants with Right of Survivorship is easy, common, and often disastrous.  Sadly, children – both minor and adult – are often disinherited.

While there are several forms of joint ownership, the one most people use (and the one considered in this discussion) is called “Joint Ownership with Right of Survivorship.” When one owner dies, the jointly owned asset automatically, by operation of law, transfers to the surviving owner.  

  • Joint ownership is a very common way for married people to own their assets. 

  • Joint ownership is also commonly used by aging parents and their adult children.

Joint Ownership Just Postpones Probate:

In most cases, joint ownership merely postpones probate; it doesn’t totally avoid it.  If the surviving owner does not add a new joint owner (or place the asset in trust) before she dies, the asset will have to go through probate before it can go to the heirs.  Or, if the owners die at the same time, probate is required immediately.

Joint Ownership Can Cause You to Unintentionally Disinherit Your Beloved Children:

Surprising to most parents, assets titled as “Joint Tenants with Right of Survivorship” are NOT controlled by their Will or Trust.  In fact, if you are the first owner to die, you can’t control what happens to that asset.  

  • If you add a spouse who is not the parent of all of your children as a joint owner, you will disinherit your children from a previous relationship.

  • If you add one child as a joint owner, you will disinherit your other children.

The transfer of ownership takes place immediately upon your death. Even if your Will or Trust directs that you want someone in particular to receive your share of a jointly owned asset, it will still go to the surviving owner.  The surviving owner can then do whatever he or she wants with the entire asset.

Here’s an example:

After Robert died, Joan owned their vacation home outright. She remarried a few years later, and she added her new spouse’s name to the title. When Joan died, her children were shocked to learn that the new husband now owned the property, even though their father had always promised it would stay in the family and go to the three of them.  

Other Risks of Joint Ownership:

  1. While it’s easy to add a co-owner’s name to a title, taking someone’s name off a title can be difficult. If the person does not agree, you could end up in court.

  2. Your assets are exposed to the other owner’s debt and obligations. For example, if you add your adult son on the title of your home and he is successfully sued, you could be forced to sell your home.

  3. There could be serious gift and/or income tax consequences.

  4. If you add a minor as a joint owner, the only way to sell or refinance the asset is through a court guardianship.

  5. If you need to sell or refinance and your co-owner is incapacitated and unable to conduct business, you’ll have to ask the court to appoint someone to sign for your co-owner (even if that co-owner is your spouse). Once the court gets involved, it usually stays involved to protect the incapacitated owner’s interest until the incapacity ends or the person dies.

Actions to Consider:

  1. To avoid both inconvenience and tragedy, call our office immediately to set up an appointment and have your asset ownership reviewed.

  2. We will review your asset ownership and explain what will happen to your assets if you become disabled and when you die.

  3. We will show you how to own your assets to best ensure your estate plan works, meaning it does what you think it’s going to do.

Joint ownership with a sibling, life partner, business partner, child, spouse, or anyone else, puts your assets and your children’s inheritance at risk.  It may cause significant and unnecessary taxes and cause your estate plan to fail.  To avoid both inconvenience and tragedy, you are invited to call our office right now.

If you are interested in ensuring that your family is cared for after you have passed away, please call our office at 415-625-0773 to schedule your free estate planning consultation with San Francisco’s premiere estate planning attorney, Matthew J. Tuller.

U.S. Supreme Court Rules Inherited IRAs are Not Protected from Creditors

On June 12, 2014, the U.S. Supreme Court—in a unanimous decision—ruled that Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs) inherited by anyone other than a spouse are not retirement funds and therefore are not protected from the beneficiary’s creditors in bankruptcy.

The reasoning is, because the beneficiary cannot make additional contributions or delay distributions until retirement, it is not a retirement account. There is, in fact, nothing to prevent a beneficiary from withdrawing funds, or even clearing out the account, at any time. As a result, these funds must also be available to satisfy the beneficiary’s creditors during bankruptcy. Following the same logic, an inherited IRA is also subject to divorce proceedings.

This is not great news for parents who have planned to leave large IRA accounts to their children or grandchildren, with the desire to continue the tax-deferred earnings for many more years over their lives. 

Fortunately, there is a solution. By using a trust as the beneficiary of the IRA, you can continue the tax-deferred earnings over a beneficiary’s life expectancy and protect your hard-earned savings from the beneficiary’s creditors.

The Key Takeaways:

  1. Inherited IRAs are not protected from the beneficiary’s creditors in bankruptcy.

  2. Using a trust as beneficiary can continue the tax-deferred earnings over a beneficiary’s life expectancy and protect these savings from the beneficiary’s creditors.

Using a Trust as Beneficiary of an IRA:

Using a trust as beneficiary of an IRA or retirement plan account will let you use the oldest beneficiary’s life expectancy to stretch out the tax-deferred growth. It will let you keep control over when the beneficiary receives distributions, and can protect the asset from the beneficiary’s creditors (including bankruptcy), predators (those who may have undue influence on the beneficiary), irresponsible spending, and divorce proceedings. You can even provide for a beneficiary with special needs without jeopardizing government benefits.

In order for the trust to qualify, it must meet certain requirements, including that a) it must be valid under state law; b) it must be irrevocable not later than the death of the owner; c) all beneficiaries of the trust must be individuals (no charities or other non-persons) and they must be identifiable from the trust document; and d) a copy of the trust document must be provided to the account custodian by a certain date.

Because the trust’s oldest beneficiary’s life expectancy must be used to determine the distributions, many people opt for a separate share for each beneficiary or even a separate trust for each beneficiary. These are called “stand alone retirement trusts” because they are created solely for retirement plan and IRA assets. (A revocable living trust would still be used for other general estate planning purposes.)

What You Need to Know:

Planning for IRAs and other tax-deferred savings plans is not something to be taken lightly and not a task to try to master yourself. The laws are complicated, and a simple mistake can be disastrous and irreversible. Because there is often a lot of money involved with these plans, it pays to work with an estate planning attorney who has considerable experience in this area.

Important Notes:

  1. conduit trust requires that all distributions from the IRA or retirement plan must be distributed to the trust’s beneficiary(ies). (The trust is simply a “conduit” from the plan to the beneficiary.) These distributions are not protected from a beneficiary’s creditors and have no asset protection.

  2. With an accumulation trust, the distributions may be kept within the trust instead of being distributed to the beneficiary. Assets that remain in the trust are protected from the beneficiary’s creditors, but any undistributed income kept in the trust will be subject to higher income tax rates than what an individual would pay on the same amount.

  3. A “trust protector” can be given the power to change the trust from a conduit to an accumulation trust. This can be valuable if there is a change in the beneficiary’s circumstances (due to disability, drug problems, etc.), making it advantageous to keep the distributions in the trust.

  4. Your attorney will be able to suggest the best combination of beneficiary designations for both the IRA or retirement plan and your Trust(s). Having these options will let your beneficiaries make good decisions based on the circumstances at that time. For example, if your spouse is in ill health when you die, it may make sense for your spouse to disclaim an IRA so that your children can inherit it and have distributions paid over their longer life expectancies.

Take Action:

It is essential that you take action to ensure that your IRA can’t be seized by your beneficiaries’ creditors.  Call our office now to schedule an appointment.  We’ll get you in as soon as possible and analyze whether a Standalone Retirement Trust is appropriate to protect both your beneficiaries and your assets.  

If you are interested in ensuring that your family is cared for after you have passed away, please call our office at 415-625-0773 to schedule your free estate planning consultation with San Francisco’s premiere estate planning attorney, Matthew J. Tuller.

A-B Trusts—Do You Need to Get Rid of Yours?

Are you married? Is the last time your spouse and you updated your estate plan more than three years ago? If so, it is time for you to update your estate plan. Chances are that your estate plan contains “A-B Trust” planning (also called “Marital and Family Trusts” or “QTIP” and “Bypass Trusts”) which, up until 2011, was the only way for married couples to double the value of their federal estate tax exemptions. However, all of this changed in 2011, when “portability” of the estate tax exemption between spouses was introduced for the first time.

In simple terms, “portability” means that when the first spouse dies, the surviving spouse can claim the deceased spouse’s unused federal estate tax exemption and add it to his or her own exemption.  The good news is that portability has been made a permanent part of the federal estate tax laws.  The bad news is that the A-B Trust planning in your old estate plan may now do more harm than good.

Take, for example, Fred and June who have been married for 40 years.  If Fred dies in 2014 and none of his $5.34 million estate tax exemption is used, then June can add Fred’s $5.34 million exemption to her own $5.34 million exemption so that June now has an exemption equal to $10.68 million.  Better yet, all property passing outright to June from Fred’s estate, revocable trust, or by right of survivorship will receive a full step up in income tax basis to the fair market values as of Fred’s date of death.  Subsequently, when June dies her beneficiaries will receive a full, second step up in income tax basis to the fair market value as of June’s date of death.

What if instead Fred and June have a typical 1990’s estate plan, which uses those good old A-B Trusts to ensure full use of both spouses’ federal estate tax exemptions?  If Fred and June were lax and neglected to update their 1990’s estate plan and Fred dies in 2014, then not only will June be stuck with A-B Trusts that were drafted using decades-old planning priorities, but their heirs won’t receive any step up in income tax basis for the assets remaining in the B Trust when June dies.  Instead, the heirs will inherit the B Trust assets with the income tax basis calculated as of Fred’s 2014 date of death.  If June lives for a long time, then this could very well result in a large income tax bill when the heirs decide to sell the inherited assets many years down the road. 

Fred and June’s story is only one scenario.  It shows the down side of an old estate plan that uses A-B Trust planning.  On the other hand, there are still many good reasons for married couples to keep A-B Trust planning in their updated estate plans.  If you’re married and your estate plan is more than a few years old, then give us a call so that together we can determine if an A-B Trust plan still makes sense for you and your family.  It is quite possible that your existing estate plan can be revised so that it takes advantage of the good features of A-B Trust planning while gaining the benefits of an additional step up in basis.

If your living trust contains A-B Trust planning, you may have a trust administration disaster waiting. We implore you to have your estate plan reviewed by a law firm that specializes in estate planning and administration. If interested, please contact our office for a no-charge estate plan review to ensure that you do not have an outdated marital funding clause, which can have disastrous results.

If you are interested in ensuring that your family is cared for after you have passed away, please call our office at 415-625-0773 to schedule your free estate planning consultation with San Francisco’s premiere estate planning attorney, Matthew J. Tuller.

What if Treating Your Children Fairly Means Unequal Inheritances?

When planning their estate, most parents express the desire to treat their children equally out of a sense of fairness.  However, sometimes being fair or doing what’s right by your children may not mean equal or the same inheritances.

The Key Takeaways:

  1. Treating children fairly does not always mean equal inheritances.

  2. How and when each child receives an inheritance may need to be customized to your children as individuals.

  3. Not providing an outright inheritance is usually a good choice, as assets that stay in a trust are protected from irresponsible spending, divorce, predators, and creditors.

When Unequal Inheritances May Be Fair:

There are often special circumstances to consider before you divide the family pie into equal parts. For example:

  • You may want to leave more assets to your son who struggles to support his family on a modest teacher’s salary than to your daughter who makes six figures, married a Wall Street tycoon, and has chosen not to have children.

  • You may want to give a larger inheritance to a child who has dedicated himself to volunteer work, the arts, religion, or public service.

  • You may want to compensate a child who has given up part of his own life to care for you.

  • You may want to provide for grandchildren even if one child has more children than another.

  • You may have a much younger child who needs care into adulthood whereas your adult children are financially independent. 

  • You may have a special needs child who will need care for his entire lifetime.

  • You may have a child who has contributed to the family business and other children who have not.  Instead of making them all equal owners in the business, you may want to leave the business to the one who has contributed and shown an interest, and then provide for the others with other assets and/or life insurance.

Distribution of Inheritances May Also Vary:

Not only do you need to decide how much your children should receive, but also when they will receive it—and that can be different for each child. You can distribute inheritances in one lump sum or in installments; or, you can keep an inheritance in a trust. Consider factors such as the size of the potential inheritance, your children’s ages and family situation, how they have handled their own money, and how much they need your financial gift.

What You Should Know:

Many parents do not provide outright inheritances, preferring to keep the assets in a trust for their children. The trustee can make distributions for your children’s benefit based on guidelines you provide, but assets that stay in the trust are protected from irresponsible spending, creditors (bankruptcy, lawsuits, and divorce), and predators (those with undue influence on your child).

Example: Frank and Jen have two sons who are stable and responsible with their own money; they will receive their inheritances in a lump sum after their parents both have died. However, their daughter is in and out of rehab and has been irresponsible with her own money. Fearing she will misuse her inheritance, they decided to keep her share in a trust so it can provide for her without being completely available to her.

 Actions to Consider:

  1. If you can afford it, consider giving your children some of their inheritance now. Not only will you have the opportunity to witness them enjoying your gift, but it will also provide insight as to how your children will handle an inheritance.   

  2. Consider whether your children should inherit everything you own.  Perhaps you have additional goals such as providing for your grandchildren’s education, gifting other loved ones, providing for beloved pets, making charitable contributions, or setting up a family foundation or donor-advised fund. 

In summation, It is essential that you take action to ensure your children receive their inheritances as is best for them as individuals.  Our office can ensure your estate plan and your children’s best interests match…and continue to match as life unfolds.