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Baby Boomers: Will They Be Able to Afford Their Parents?
By Lee Phillips
Editor's Summary: The focus of this article is to provide
baby boomers with advice to help their aging parents plan their estate
- if they have not already done so. A must-read for those boomers interested
in helping their parents make their hard-earned money work smarter for
them.
Do you worry about whether your aging parents have their "affairs in
order?" You should. After all, you’re the one who will have to pay unnecessary
taxes and endure time-consuming court procedures if your parents don’t
have an effective estate plan. Without some forethought on their part
and your part, you could be facing a lot of wasted time and money in
addition to a lot of frustration. All of the waste and frustration can
easily be avoided.
Experts predict $10 trillion will be transferred in the next two decades
from parents to baby boomers. The average inheritance will be $200,000.
The parents have spent all of their lives saving to leave something
to their family. For most boomers, their inheritance will be the largest
single financial transaction most they will ever handle. Depending upon
the planning done today, the amount actually transferred could be doubled.
During the final years of a parent’s life, the family can lose a lot
of the estate in rest home expenses or legal fees. Too often the family
has to get a court order to have a parent declared incompetent and get
permission to manage their affairs. After both parents die, probate
will eat 2-5% of the estate, and estate taxes can take another 37-50%.
Additionally, the estate mess can take many days of time out of the
boomer’s busy life. Not only money is lost, but life styles often have
to be altered just to work through the mess.
Good planning is worth every effort made and every dime spent, not
just in the money and timesavings, but also in the peace of mind it
will give to both the parents and the kids. Boomers need to help get
the planning done. However, discussing money, especially in this context,
is very unpleasant for most families. The kids don’t want to appear
grabby or look like they are just waiting for their parents to die so
they can get their inheritance. The parents don’t want to face their
own mortality, and they don’t want the kids nosing in their financial
affairs. The bottom line is nothing gets done.
The sooner this discussion takes place the better. Everybody has to
recognize that planning is good business and financial management. The
parents have an obligation to take care of it for the children’s sake,
and the children have an obligation to help their aging parents. The
discussion will take place at some point. The worst time to have the
discussion is when a parent is in intensive care.
The following six tips will help protect a parent’s hard-earned money,
transfer the maximum amount of inheritance to the family, and ease the
family’s legal and emotional burden.
1. Review current wills and/or living trusts. Do the documents
reflect the parent’s current wishes? Have there been changes in family
relationships, such as divorces, marriages, or new grandchildren?
2. Look into living trusts. All wills that transfer property
must go through a court process called probate. Probate eats time and
money – lots of both. Today, many families use living trusts to avoid
probate, reduce legal fees, and pay the least possible taxes. Living
trusts work well, provided they are handled properly during the parent’s
life. Is the living trust being used properly?
3. Dodge family disputes. Make sure either the will or trust
distribute personal items with a list describing the item and the intended
recipient. Most states allows distribution of personal items through
a “personal letter,” which is just a list of items and their intended
recipient. The letter is not part of the will until death, and then
it essentially becomes part of the will. Thus, the letter can be rewritten
or updated as often as desired without a trip back to the attorney.
The letter must be “authorized” by the individual’s will in order for
it to be effective. If specific distribution of personal items like
the shot gun, wedding ring, and the family stamp collection is made
in the letter, family fights will be avoided.
4. Split trusts to save taxes. If mom and dad have over $1.5
million in their estate, including the life insurance, retirement money,
and business, they should either have an individual trust for each or
have a trust that “splits” into two trusts when the first one of them
dies. This shields up to $3 million from estate taxes that eat away
at a family’s wealth.
5. Protect life insurance. Life insurance is taxed. The family
doesn’t have to pay income tax on the money they get, but the money
is taxed in the departed loved one’s estate and the IRS will routinely
take up to 50% of it. A living trust can help in smaller estates, and
an irrevocable insurance trust can totally eliminate the tax in bigger
estates.
6. Solve the incompetency problem. Use a durable power of attorney
to transfer power to someone when the parent can no longer take care
of their own business affairs. The power of attorney has to have language
in it that states it will endure the incompetency of the individual
making the power of attorney. With the power of attorney, there isn’t
any need to have the parent declared incompetent and have a court appoint
a guardian. It removes a lot of frustration.
The parents need to soften up and realize that estate planning is something
they need to talk about and be taking care of. If they cannot do it
for themselves, they need to realize that their children are the ones
that they have to turn to. The boomers need to take their parents’ estate
planning very seriously. The boomers have a lot at stake – a lot of
money, a lot of time, and a lot of frustration.
Attorney Lee R. Phillips is a nationally recognized expert in the field
of finance, estate
planning, and asset
protection. Lee is licensed to practice law before the United States
Supreme Court and also holds licenses in insurance and securities. Lee
is an engaging, dynamic speaker and has spoken to over a half million
people throughout the United States, Canada and the Pacific Rim helping
them understand the law and how to use it to their benefit.
His goal is to reposition you in the law so you can actually use the
law to make more money, and keep it! His ability to present critical
information in a clear manner has made him a highly sought after guest
on hundreds of radio and television shows.
His specialty is in creating easy to understand, do-it-yourself legal
systems. For more information, visit http://www.DIYestateplanning.com.
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/
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