It being May, our thoughts are on longer days, warmer weather, graduations, and Mother’s Day. Being a mom myself, I can say with certainty that while I loved the gifts my children gave me for Mother’s Day, especially the hand-made ones when they were little, nothing warms a mother’s heart more than hearing her children say, “I followed your advice Mom and you were right.” (I think I can hear the mothers out there both agreeing and laughing hysterically…)
Read on for 5 Things your mom would tell you if your mom was an estate planning attorney.
1. Just Do It. Not to infringe on Nike, but if you’re an adult and you don’t yet have an estate plan, just do it. A basic ‘don’t leave home without it’ estate plan consists of a Will, Power of Attorney and Health Care documents. A Revocable Living Trust is an estate planning tool which can address many goals that people have when creating an estate plan such as probate avoidance, management of assets for young or disabled beneficiaries, and creditor protection for inherited assets left to children or other beneficiaries.
2. Get organized. This is the estate plan equivalent of ‘clean your room’ – something your mom may have said to you once or twice. But seriously, I often say to my clients that the best gift they can give to their families is to keep their records organized and updated. Would your family know what bills need to be paid and how to access the funds to pay them if you were incapacitated or at your death? Would they be able to easily discover what financial accounts you have? For many people their financial information is now available only via online access, and therefore they do not receive monthly statements in the mail. This can be a real problem if you have not prepared a list of your accounts (and, at the risk of horrifying IT people everywhere, your user names and passwords to access those online accounts) and made this information available to at least one trusted person. Consider what someone would need to figure out what you own and how to access it and prepare a road map.
3. Check your Beneficiary Designations. Many assets, such as retirement accounts, life insurance policies, and payable-on-death bank accounts, pass directly to beneficiaries when the owner passes away. It is crucial to review and update beneficiary designations regularly to ensure they align with your overall estate plan. Failing to designate beneficiaries or keeping outdated designations can lead to unintended consequences, such as assets passing to ex-spouses or deceased individuals. It can also have serious negative tax consequences when it comes to qualified retirement accounts. Reviewing your beneficiary designations on a regular basis is also important. When financial advisors change companies, the beneficiary designations that were set on the IRAs with the old company do not carry over to the new company. The fairly simple task of making sure the beneficiary designations are current will go a long way to ensuring a smooth, probate-free, and tax efficient transition of these assets at your death.
4. Make Sure Someone’s Watching the Children (Mom’s Grandchildren). For those who have minor (under age 18) children, it is vital to create a Will to name one or more people as the legal guardians for those minor children. The legal guardian of a minor child is the person who will have physical custody of the child and decide where child will reside, where the child will go to school, and oversee their religious education. The legal guardian is also the person who will have the authority to make medical decisions and have access to school records. However, naming someone in your Will as the guardian for your minor child does not confer the legal status of guardian; only a court can appoint a legal guardian. The naming of a guardian by parents in their Wills is an expression of their wishes which the court will honor (unless there is a valid objection raised but that’s a topic for a different day) but the process takes time. Because of that delay, parents should also sign a document appointing a temporary guardian for their minor children. Massachusetts has a statute that permits parents to appoint a temporary (for 60 days) guardian for their minor or disabled children. This allows time for the court to act to appoint the permanent legal guardian. The appointment of the temporary guardian does not require the involvement of the court.
5. Save Taxes if you can. When estate planning attorneys talk about taxes, we are usually referring to estate taxes. The estate tax is a transfer tax imposed on the value of assets transferred to beneficiaries when someone dies. There is both a federal and a Massachusetts estate tax. For both federal and Massachusetts purposes, assets that pass to a surviving spouse pass free of any estate tax regardless of the value of the assets. For assets passing to a person other than a surviving spouse, there is estate tax payable if the value of the estate exceeds the allowable exemption amount. In 2024, the federal estate tax exemption is $13.61 million and $2 million in Massachusetts. If your estate is at or above those levels, consult with an experienced estate planning attorney about planning to reduce estate taxes.
Creating and maintaining a comprehensive, up-to-date estate plan is a gift to your family that they will truly appreciate. If you don’t have an estate plan, or if it’s been more than five years since you’ve reviewed your existing plan, call us or email us to schedule an appointment with one of our estate planning attorneys. And Happy Mother’s Day to all the mothers out there!
Attorney Suzanne R. Sayward is a partner with the Dedham law firm of Samuel, Sayward & Baler LLC which focuses on advising its clients in the areas of estate planning, estate settlement and elder law matters. She is certified as an Elder Law Attorney by the National Elder Law Foundation, a private organization whose standards for certification are not regulated by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. This article is not intended to provide legal advice or create or imply an attorney-client relationship. No information contained herein is a substitute for a personal consultation with an attorney. For more information visit our website at www.ssbllc.com or call 781/461-1020.
May, 2024
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