An Estate Plan Can Help You Reach Your #GOALS
Many of us put off estate planning because it deals with a lot of challenging topics–our mortality, potential taxes, our finances, our health, our loved ones. It can feel easier to put it on the back burner, especially if we don’t feel “wealthy” or “old”–two common descriptors we all think about when we hear the words “estate planning.”
We’ve said it over and over: EVERYONE needs an estate plan (not just the wealthy or aging). Imagine if a relative left you $500 or $5,000 or $50,000 as an inheritance. It’s probably not going to make you rich, but all of us welcome any sort of unexpected assistance. Now imagine if you had a lengthy legal process to wade through to receive the gift. You probably would have wished that your relative had created an estate plan to simplify the process, regardless of the size of that gift. This is particularly true if anyone is financially dependent upon you.
Estate planning doesn’t have to be overwhelming or induce anxiety. Instead of looking at estate planning as “just another thing you have to figure out,” start with your goals. You probably have a lot of it figured out already.
Who do you want to provide for?
If something happened to you yesterday, who would be the people, pets, organizations, or causes that you would want to provide for? Your spouse or partner? Your children? Your parents or siblings? Your dog or other pets? A charity addressing a cause that you are passionate about? All of the above? Identifying who you would want to help is the very first step.
Once you have figured out the who, next comes the what. We all have differing levels of assets. Our finances, our obligations, all look different from person to person. Like we highlighted above, even the smallest amount can significantly help someone else. Would you want to itemize specific gifts to specific beneficiaries? Would you want to divide up whatever you own into fractions or percentages? Or perhaps a combination of the two. You can define what you provide to others however you see fit.
Next, you will want to figure out the how and when you are providing for the who above. Are you providing for young children or a family pet? Or maybe both at the same time! Those two gifts will look dramatically different. It probably will not be helpful to either group to dump a large sum of money onto their laps. These gifts will need to be managed, and the managers of the gifts will want guidance and means to execute the gift.
We all have goals. Most of the time those goals include caring for our people and pets. An estate plan will help you reach those goals, even when you are not around. If you can describe who you want to provide for, then you’re most of the way there to creating an estate plan. Contact an estate planning professional to reduce it down to writing so that you can take one important step toward peace of mind.