You have minor children.
Provide for the smooth transition of your children at your
death by naming Guardians of their Person (those people who will physically
take care of them) and of their Estates (those people who will take care of
their property).
You own real property.
Filing your Will and other probate documents in the county
records is an efficient and easy way to provide clear title to the property.
You own brokerage
accounts, financial accounts and/or other accounts that do not pass directly at
your death under the contract terms.
These institutions will require you to show proof of your
beneficiaries or heirs in order to transfer the accounts – a Will is a simple
solution.
You never got around to
naming a beneficiary on your life insurance, 401K, IRA or other
pension/retirement account.
In most instances the proceeds will go to the “estate” –
having a Will in place is much more cost effective than having the Court
determine who your heirs are on its own.
You want to continue Charitable Giving
after your death.
You can establish gifts to charities in many different ways in
a Will.
You want to pass your
property to someone on a government program (e.g. Medicaid) or who may need to
qualify for a government program in the future.
Inheriting property outright (rather than in a special trust
contained in your Will or in another appropriate document) could substantially
interfere with certain government benefits.
At your death, your
property passes to minors, incapacitated persons (e.g. someone who cannot make
decisions on their own due to medical/mental conditions) and/or disabled
persons.
Establishing “contingent trusts” in your Will is an easy way
to provide for the distribution of property to these groups of people.
You own certain
intellectual property (e.g. copyrights, patents, trademarks, etc.).
A Will provides an excellent mechanism for determining who
will receive this property (e.g. maybe a museum, gallery, school).
You want to decide who will receive your
property at your death.
If you do not have a Will, or other similar estate planning
documents in place, the State of Texas has determined who will receive your
property at your death.
You want to decrease or avoid paying federal estate taxes at your
death.
There are significant benefits to tax planning if your estate
is over the allowable exemption.
Concise, relevant, and just plain good information. Love it!!
ReplyDeleteBrooke Hardie