Making Your Own Decisions Through Estate Planning- Estate planning is often set aside in favor of more fun activities, like vacation planning and preparing for family holidays. However, once done, it provides great peace of mind. A recent article from MLT News, “Estate planning—making personal choices,” looks at what an estate plan encompasses.
Durable Power of Attorney for Finances and Health Care. These documents allow you to name the person you choose to make financial or health care decisions if you cannot because of illness or incapacity. They can take effect immediately upon being executed or created as “springing” documents that take effect when you are deemed incapacitated. However, springing POAs may lead to delay, so most people choose Durable Powers. Your estate planning attorney will explain the best options for you.
Advanced Directives focus on your wishes for medical care when you are unable to communicate and are nearing end-of-life or likely not to live without artificial means. Your advanced directives can be very specific about what kinds of treatment you want or when you would prefer to be taken off life-support.
Disposition Authorizations are used to convey your wishes for burial, cremation, memorial services, or other terms for what you want to happen to your body after you die. These vary by state, so check with your estate planning attorney. While difficult to consider, if you have strong preferences, it’s best to have them in a written document.
Making Your Own Decisions Through Estate Planning
Last Will and Testament direct how you want your assets to be distributed after death. A will is also used to nominate a personal representative or executor who will settle your estate. If you have minor children, your will nominates a guardian to raise them. This is a highly personal choice you can make with a will. Otherwise, the court will decide who will care for your children.
Trusts are used to manage assets during life and after death. A trust is a separate legal entity created to hold assets and distribute them to beneficiaries. A revocable trust allows the person who establishes the trust (the “grantor”) to control the assets held in the trust. However, the trade-off for continued control of assets is that they don’t have the same level of protection as an irrevocable trust. An Irrevocable Trust requires the grantor to give up control of the assets. However, the assets are better protected against creditors and are not countable for Medicaid purposes.
Your estate plan should also include checking on beneficiary designations, which are used in a variety of financial and investment accounts, IRAs, 401(k)s and insurance policies, to pass assets directly to beneficiaries upon your death.
An estate plan includes tax planning to address tax liability by taking assets out of an estate and placing them inside trusts or LLCs (Limited Liability Companies), depending on the family’s circumstances.
For families with members who are disabled, Special Needs Trusts are used to safeguard funds to plan for the individual’s future while maintaining their eligibility for means-tested government benefits.
By creating a comprehensive estate plan with an experienced estate planning attorney, you get to be the one making decisions about your future and your legacy. Without it, the laws of your state and the courts will make decisions about what will happen to you during serious illness, who receives the assets you’ve saved and who will raise your children. We know you’d rather make these decisions than have them made for you.
Schedule your phone consultation: THE LAW OFFICES OF CLAUDE S. SMITH, III
Making Your Own Decisions Through Estate Planning
Reference: MLT News (March 4, 2025) “Estate planning—making personal choices”
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