| Estate, Asset Protection And Financial Planning |
| Publications - Publications: Estate Planning | |
Estate, Asset Protection And Financial PlanningEstate planning is a process by which you plan for the management of your affairs and disposition of your property if you are or become disabled or upon your death. Asset protection planning is the process that you use to protect your assets and gifts to your beneficiaries from the claims of third parties including creditors or former spouses. Financial planning is the process by which you plan to provide for your own support and that of your dependents during your lifetime and accumulate an inheritance for your dependents. There is a 58% probability that you will suffer a disability of 90 days or more during your lifetime, during which you will require assistance with the management of your property and personal affairs. There is a 43% probability that you will require nursing home care that will have a devastating impact on your life savings and on your financial plan. During retirement there is a 50% probability that a couple age 65 will incur at least $260,000 of uninsured health and long-term care expenses and and a 5% chance of $570,000 of unfunded health and long-term care expenses. You will be virtually assured of inflation during your retirement, which may result in the cost of the goods and services that you purchase rising, while your income remains constant. Many people will spend 25% of their life in retirement, and find that they do not have the funds to enjoy retirement the way they had envisioned. Additionally, America is a litigious society with 50% of marriages ending in a divorce. Death is a certainty. It is not uncommon for a couple to be simultaneously saving for their retirement while assisting their parents and their children. You have an obligation to not only provide support to your minor or disabled children but, if they are in necessitous circumstances, to also provide support to your parents. These added expenses and support obligations can wreak havoc on your finances. These facts and statistics justify the need for most of our clients to adopt and implement a comprehensive estate, asset protection, and financial plan. A complete estate, asset protection, and financial plan should address your needs as well as the needs of your spouse, children and grandchildren, parents, life partners and business associates. The planning process requires you to consider a wide range of legal, financial, emotional, and logistical issues. The failure to plan, and to take into account the needs of your family, will cause you or your family to incur unnecessary expense, taxes, effort, delay, and stress, and may cause you to run out of money during your lifetime, spend your children’s inheritance, and rely on your children or other family members for financial assistance (i.e. leave your children or family a negative inheritance). ESTATE PLANNING DISABILITY When planning for disability, you should consider two separate matters: 1. Management of your property and personal affairs during a period of disability. Guardianship and Conservatorship - If you fail to plan, a court may appoint a guardian or conservator for you, or both, after a formal legal proceeding. A guardian is responsible for making decisions regarding the personal affairs of an incapacitated person, such as support, health care, education, and residence. A conservator is responsible for managing the estate and financial affairs of an incapacitated person. In many cases, the court will appoint the same person as both the guardian and conservator of the incapacitated person. The appointment process is lengthy, expensive, and often embarrassing. It invites the prospect for disputes over who will be appointed as the guardian and conservator. After their appointment, both the guardian and the conservator of the incapacitated person must file annual reports and accountings. Joint Bank Account - Many people use a joint bank account as their disability plan. The co-owner of the account will deposit your income into the account and pay your bills. A joint bank account can be very helpful if you become disabled. However, a joint bank account is, at best, an incomplete plan. The co-owner does not have the authority to perform many acts, including filing your income tax returns or selling your real property. Additionally, the co-owner will own the account at your death, and if the co-owner has marital or creditor problems, the co-owner’s spouse or creditors may seek to seize the assets in the account. Trust Agreement - A trust is an effective means of managing assets for an incapacitated beneficiary. The trust is separate legal entity. One person (the "trustee") holds property, usually real estate or investments, for the benefit of another (the "beneficiary"). The person who gives the property for the trust is known as the "donor" or "grantor." The trustee holds legal title to and is responsible for managing, investing, and distributing the trust property for the benefit of the beneficiary. A trust may have more than one trustee or beneficiary. Depending on your situation, establishing a trust offers several advantages. The most well known advantage is the avoidance of probate. That is, at the death of the donor, any property held in the trust prior to the donor’s death passes immediately to or in further trust for the benefit of the beneficiaries by the terms of the trust without requiring probate. This can save time and money for the beneficiaries. Certain trusts can also result in tax advantages for both the donor and the beneficiary, or they may be used to protect property from creditors or help the grantor qualify for Medicaid. Trusts are private documents, and only those with a direct interest in the trust need to know of trust assets and distribution. If well-drafted and funded with assets, another advantage of a trust is its effectiveness as a means of managing the assets for the benefit of an incapacitated beneficiary. There are many types of trusts, some of the more common of which are discussed below:
General Durable Power of Attorney – Virtually every disability plan should include a general durable power of attorney. With this document, you appoint an agent to manage your property and affairs. You should select the agent carefully. The agent will have a great deal of authority to act on your behalf. The durable power of attorney should name a successor agent to serve if the primary agent fails or ceases to serve. The durable power of attorney may be drafted to be effective immediately or to be effective only if you become disabled. The durable power of attorney is not a form, and there is no one power of attorney that is appropriate for all people. The power of attorney should be drafted to meet your specific needs and circumstances. Since powers of attorney are creatures of state law, it is important that you insure your power of attorney complies with the laws of each state in which you reside and own property. Whether you use a joint account, power of attorney, a trust, or both a power of attorney and trust, the selection of the joint account owner, agent, or trustee is the most important decision you will make. Even a good disability plan will be frustrated by poor management. You should insure that the person you select is honest, willing to devote the necessary time, will respect your plan and wishes, and has the necessary skills and expertise to assist you. Oast & Hook can assist you in preparing the necessary documents and in selecting an appropriate person to implement your disability plan. Where appropriate, Oast & Hook serves as a trustee or an agent for its clients. 2. Health Care Decision-Making Advance Medical Directive (AMD) - Your health care decision-making is a second concern if you suffer a disability. In addition to planning for the management of your property, you should provide for your health care decision making in the event that you become disabled. You have the right to make your own health care decisions, including the right to refuse health care. If you are disabled, your health care representative may make health care decisions for you; however, the state has the right to regulate the manner in which they make those decisions, including the evidence your health care representative must produce to make decisions for you. Virginia has adopted an Advance Health Care Directive Act. This Act authorizes you to: 1) appoint an agent to make health care decisions for you if you are disabled, 2) give instructions concerning your health care if you are dying, and 3) authorize health care providers to keep your family informed. Because AMDs are also creatures of state law, your AMD should comply with the laws of each state in which you reside. You should also provide your regular physician and your agent with a copy of your AMD and insure that it is available if needed. You should discuss your wishes with your family. Additionally, you should carry an AMD card with you in your purse or wallet which provides notice to medical personnel that you have executed an AMD and provides the names and contact information of your designated agents. Every estate and financial plan should contain an AMD. None of us want to see our family and loved ones involved in expensive and adversarial litigation in order to carry out our wishes. However, the lack of such a directive has resulted in litigation for many families (for example, litigation has resulted in several nationally known cases involving Terry Schivo and Nancy Cruzan). Oast & Hook assists its clients in: 1) developing a customized AMD that documents your preferences, 2) selecting an appropriate agent to implement those preferences and 3) registering your AMD so it will be available when and if needed. DEATH Estate planning for death centers on planning for the transfer of your assets to your beneficiaries in the most efficient manner and at the lowest possible cost. Wealth Transfer Taxes - The uncertainty concerning federal estate tax rules continues. The federal government has a unified gift and estate tax. These taxes provide for an unlimited marital and charitable deduction. The gift tax has an annual exclusion of $13,000 (in 2011) per year per donee and an unlimited tuition and medical expense exclusion. During 2011 and 2112, $5 million can be transferred during a person’s lifetime or at death without the payment of a gift or estate tax. To the extent that the $5 million is used during your lifetime, it reduces the estate tax exemption amount upon death . For married couples, the unused estate tax exemption of the first of them to die can be used by the survivor. Beginning in 2013, under current law, the exemption amount returns to $1 million and the gift and estate tax rate to 45%, and the right of the surviving spouse to use the deceased spouse’s unused exemption ceases. The tax rates and annual estate tax exclusion amounts are as follows: Year Rate Exclusion 2011 35% $5 million 2012 35% $5 million (indexed for inflation) 2011 & thereafter 55% $1 million It is likely that after the next presidential election in 2012 the Estate and Gift Tax law will be revisited and revised. The exemption is unlikely to return to $1 million but may return to $3.5 million depending on which political faction is successful. Due to projected budget deficits, planning techniques such as discount planning and GRATs may be restricted. In light of this uncertainty the estate plans of persons or couples with in excess of $1 million should incorporate estate and gift tax planning. Your beneficiaries will receive an income tax basis increase to the date of death value of your assets. Additionally, the federal government imposes a generation skipping transfer tax upon gifts to grandchildren or other beneficiaries who are two generations below your age when the gifts in the aggregate exceed your federal exclusion listed above. In light of the continuing uncertainty over the estate and gift tax, every individual or couple with an estate (including life insurance and retirement accounts) in excess of $1 million should have their estate planning documents reviewed. Virginia's probate tax is $1.33 per $1,000 of probate assets. Many of your assets, however, will not be included in your probate estate. For example, life insurance, IRA accounts, or annuities payable to a named beneficiary are not included in your probate estate. Real or personal property owned jointly with the right of survivorship with another person who survives you will not be included in your probate estate. Generally, only assets titled solely in your individual name without a payable on death or beneficiary designation are included in your estate. Virginia does not have a gift, inheritance or estate tax. If you own real property in another state, however, the other state may impose gift, inheritance, probate, or estate taxes on the property in that state. Death taxes may be reduced or eliminated through appropriate planning. If you have an estate in excess of the exclusion, you can reduce the estate taxes that your estate will pay through estate planning. The available planning methods include:
Oast & Hook can help you 1) determine which of these methods are appropriate for you and 2) implement a sound plan to minimize wealth transfer taxes. Disposition of Assets - You may dispose of your assets at your death by many means, the most common being by a Will. Depending on the types of assets that you own at your death, your Will may have to go through a court supervised probate administration in order for your assets to pass to your beneficiaries. Probate can often be a time consuming and expensive process. The probate process can be avoided, at least in part, by the use of RLTs (see prior discussion of RLTs in Disability planning section), proper titling of assets or designations of beneficiary. For example, if title to real estate is held jointly with the right of survivorship, title to the real estate will pass automatically to the surviving joint owner at your death. The same holds true for bank accounts and other assets held jointly with the right of survivorship. Similarly, you can make certain financial and investment accounts "transfer on death" or "payable on death" to named beneficiaries. You can and should also designate specific beneficiaries of your life insurance policies, annuity contracts, 401(k) plan accounts, 403(b) accounts and IRA’s. At your death, those assets will automatically pass to these designated beneficiaries or co-owners despite any contrary provisions in your Will or RLT. Notwithstanding the convenience of probate avoidance techniques, everyone should have a Will for a complete estate plan. A Will is an ideal document to designate a personal representative to settle your affairs, pay your bills, file your tax returns at your death, appoint a guardian for minor children, apportion taxes among your beneficiaries and dispose of your assets not disposed of by other means. In selecting your personal representative, you should consider family members, your friends, your business associates, your bank and your attorney. You should not automatically waive surety on the executor’s bond. It is insurance for your family’s protection. Once you have completed your Will and, in some cases, RLT, it is crucial that you review them in connection with your form of ownership of assets and beneficiary designations to ensure that your overall estate plan works as you wish. Estate Planning for Same Sex Couples Same sex couples present different estate and financial planning issues from traditional married couples. Under federal law same sex couples may not marry. However, there are over 1,000 federal statutes in which marital status affects eligibility for federal benefits. For example, a same sex couple can not use the Married Filing Joint Returns income tax table, but must file separate returns using the tax table for single individuals. Virginia law forbids marriage by same sex couples and the creation of contracts or legal status that would convey to same sex couples the same rights that marriage would grant. Therefore, in Virginia a same sex couple may not enter into a Domestic Partnership agreement. Additionally, default legal rules (for example, preferences for guardian, conservator and estate administrator) will frequently be contrary to the couple’s wishes. As a result, formal estate planning is critical for same sex couples. Because of legal, religious and societal issues (including hostile family members), same sex couples face a real threat to the execution of their wishes. Therefore, it is critical for same sex couples to execute detailed and legally enforceable instructions concerning the management of their financial and health care in the event of disability and the disposition of their assets and remains in the event of death. In addition, same sex couples must confront the impact of federal and state taxation. For example, the unlimited marital deduction is not available to them. Therefore, the couple faces the potential of significant death taxes on the first of them to die and the need for liquidity to pay those taxes. ASSET PROTECTION PLANNING Asset protection is the arranging of assets in a way that will preserve as much value as possible for an individual and his family in the face of creditor or third party attack. The process of asset protection begins by taking inventory of your assets and liabilities. Consequently, it is often done in conjunction with estate and financial planning. For asset protection planning, Oast & Hook uses many planning tools, such as trusts (including spendthrift and asset protection trusts), family limited partnerships (FLP), limited liability companies (LLC) and various split interest arrangements, many of which can be configured as annuities. For example, we recommend that clients who own rental real property or business interests use FLPs, LLCs or corporations to limit their personal liability. In addition, we will frequently recommend that clients who are employed fully utilize their Qualified Retirement Plans which are exempt from claims of creditors. For married couples, we recommend ownership of assets as Tenants by the Entireties. The assets owned in this manner are exempt from the claims of individual creditors. Only creditors of both spouses can reach these assets. We frequently recommend using spendthrift discretionary trusts to protect gifts made to children or parents. These trusts can be used not only to maintain the beneficiary’s eligibility for needs based assistance (i.e. Medicaid, SSI … etc) but to additionally protect the gifts from the beneficiary’s creditors and marital claims. Clients frequently ask Oast & Hook attorneys about self-settled asset protection trusts. Generally, a self-settled irrevocable spendthrift trust (i.e., a trust where the grantor is also a beneficiary) is not effective for asset protection purposes. Foreign countries, such as Nevis or the Cayman Islands, have increasingly adopted legislation that authorizes self-settled asset protection trusts (foreign asset protection trusts) as a way of attracting trust administration and related business. The costs of establishing these trusts are high and the grantor and other beneficiaries do not have the protection of US law in disputes with the trustee. In addition the US government imposes strict tax reporting requirements on foreign trusts. In some cases, a US court has entered an order in a divorce and collection proceeding against the grantor of the foreign asset protection. The grantor’s failure to make the ordered payment has been held to be contempt of court and has lead to imprisonment. Alaska, Delaware and other states have attempted to attract similar clients by authorizing self-settled asset protection trusts (domestic asset protection trusts) in contravention of long-standing U.S. law. The effectiveness of the domestic asset protection trusts is not certain. Additionally, the asset protection provisions of domestic asset protection trusts may be ineffective in bankruptcy. The Bankruptcy Code now provides that the creation of a self-settled asset protection trust is a category of a possible fraudulent transfer that is subject to a 10-year statute of limitations. Where one of our clients is about to enter into a second marriage, we will frequently recommend a marital agreement defining the rights of both parties in the assets and income of the other during the marriage and in the event of divorce or death. You should consider including in the premarital agreement a provision requiring your new spouse to purchase and pay the premiums on a long-term care insurance policy. The marital agreement becomes the foundation of the client’s asset protect plan from claims by his or her spouse. Many of our clients do not have sufficient income and assets to pay for their long-term care. In the elder law context, Oast & Hook uses trusts, annuities, non negotiable promissory notes, and other techniques to protect the client from impoverishment and qualify him or her for long-term care benefits. In addition, we will frequently recommend that our clients purchase various insurance policies, including:
Over their lifetime many of our clients will have 1) accumulated too many accounts, investments and insurance policies for them to manage effectively and 2) maintained poor and incomplete financial records. Frequently, our clients will have moved and left investment accounts located near their prior residence. As a result upon their death or incapacity there is a significant risk of lost of some of these assets. Various government agencies are currently holding over $32.8 billion dollars of unclaimed assets. To protect against the lost of your assets, Oast & Hook recommends that you and your family:
If you own or own an interest in a small business you should insure that the business has a business succession plan. The purpose of the plan is to insure an orderly and efficient transition of the ownership of the business upon certain triggering events (including the owner’s divorce, retirement, disability or death) at the lowest possible tax cost. The plan should guarantee a buyer for the departing owner at a defined price and prevent the sale to an unwelcome party. Waiting too long or the failure to adopt a business succession plan can be very expensive:
Oast & Hook can help you develop and implement an asset protection plan to address the concerns and threats that you or your family will likely confront. FINANCIAL PLANNING America is aging. From 2005 to 2020, the population of those age 65 or older, and the population of those age 85 or older will increase by almost one-half (48% and 43% respectively), and the youngest seniors, age 65 to 74, will increase by 70%. The growth of the over age 65 population is due to the baby boomers aging, but the growth of the 85+ seniors is largely due to increased longevity. The Center for Retirement Research at Boston College estimates that 60% of older workers are at risk of being unable to maintain their standard of living in retirement. As people live longer in retirement, good financial planning both before retirement and post retirement becomes more important than ever to accomplish their objectives. Frequently, these objectives include:
Long-term Care Planning As you age, the probability that you will need long-term care increases. After age 65, an American has more than a 70% chance of needing some form of long-term care. What is long-term care? It includes a variety of services and supports to meet health or personal care needs over an extended period of time. Long-term care is intended to maintain health status while acute care aims to improve or correct a medical condition. How much care will be needed? On average a person 65+ will need some long-term care for three years. Twenty percent (20%) of persons 65+ will need long-term care for over five years. Women need care longer (on average 3.7 years) than men (on average 2.2 years). Who are the providers of long-term care? Family caregivers provide the most care. Obtaining care from family caregivers, however, is not cost or stress free. Frequently, the caregiver loses wages, pension benefits, or Social Security benefits. In some cases the family must supplement the senior’s income. Children can be required by court order to provide support to their parents who are in necessitous circumstances. Additionally, the caregiver will frequently incur stress trying to assist their family member while fulfilling their other family, personal and business obligations. In some cases it will cause disagreements among children when one child perceives he or she is doing more than others, one child perceives that another has more “power” or when only one child is receiving compensation for providing services. Children who assist their parents are frequently referred to as the Sandwich Generation since they are providing care for their parents, supporting themselves, and assisting their children. Appropriate planning is very important when using family caregivers. Home care services provide home health aides or licensed nurses to assist a senior remain in his or her home. These services cost on average $19 per hour (2010) for home health aids from a licensed agency. Some clients prefer to employ home health aids directly at a lower hourly cost. This perceived savings, however, may evaporate as they comply with relevant employment and tax laws. If you directly employ a home health aid, the terms of the agreement should be committed to writing and signed. When you directly employ a home health aide, Oast & Hook can help you prepare the employment agreement and comply with the relevant laws. Adult day care centers provide part-time care in a group setting. Most centers operate 10 - 12 hours per day and provide meals, social/recreational outings, and general supervision. Adult day care centers operate under a social model and/or a health care model. The average cost is about $60 per day (2010). Assisted living facilities (ALF) provide assistance with the activities in a community setting. The cost of ALFs vary but on average cost $3,185 per month (2010). Continuing Care Retirement Communities (CCRC) provide several levels of care, independent living, assisted living and nursing care, in one location. Frequently, the resident must enter the CCRC able to live in the independent living unit. As the resident requires more care, he or she moves to the appropriate unit. Typically a CCRC charge a one time entrance fee (frequently several hundred thousand dollars which may or may not be refundable) and a monthly fee. Nursing homes offer a wide range of services, including 24 hour per day nursing care. Nursing homes on average cost $6,189 per month for a private room (2010). For persons privately paying for care, it is wise to have Oast & Hook review and explain the agreements relating to the care before signing them. For example, do they contain personal guaranties that must be signed by family members or arbitration agreements? Many persons, however, are unable to pay these costs out of their income and therefore must spend their savings, frequently to the point of exhausting their savings. Other private payment options include long-term care insurance, reverse mortgages and use of your life insurance. Long-term care insurance (LTCI) is an insurance product that pays for long-term care. It is a complex form of insurance. The following matters concerning these policies should be carefully reviewed: premiums, elimination periods, triggering events, facilities (i.e. in home, assisted living facility or nursing home) covered, inflation coverage, and the financial strength of the issuing company. Recently, a new type of LTCI policy was created, called a partnership LTCI policy. If the owner otherwise qualifies for long-term care benefits, he or she can retain assets equal to the amount of benefits paid out by his or her partnership LTCI policy. We recommend that clients over the age of 60 years consider LTCI policies. Oast & Hook can help you determine if you need a LTCI policy and select the right policy. If you do purchase LTCI, you should buy enough coverage to meet your anticipated needs, and you should consider home care coverage so that you will not feel compelled to move into a nursing home. A reverse mortgage is a loan against your home that you do not have to pay back for as long as you live there. It can be paid to you all at once, as a regular monthly advance, or at times and in amounts that you choose. The loan amounts can be used to pay for long-term care expenses. You pay the money back plus interest when you die, sell your home, or permanently move out of your home. The borrower must be at least 62 years of age and must occupy the residence as his or principal residence. The reverse mortgage, however, will have a high upfront cost that makes it inappropriate unless you intend to remain in your home for an extended period of time. Life insurance is a source of cash to pay for your long-term care. There are several options to obtain cash from your life insurance:
What are the other options for the payment of your long-term care? Medicare and Medicare Supplemental insurance policies pay for a limited amount of skilled nursing facility care if you have been in a hospital for 3 days during the preceding 30 days. Medicare pays for the first 20 days of skilled nursing home care in full and in part for up to an additional 80 days. Most Medicare supplemental policies will pay the copayment for the additional 80 days. Medicare and Medicare Supplemental insurance policies do not pay for custodial or intermediate care. The Department of Veterans Affairs provides several benefits for long-term care for veterans. The Improved Disability Pension is available for veterans who do not have a service-connected disability. The benefit is also available for widows and widowers of such eligible veterans. The application for this benefit will be denied if the applicant’s income exceeds published income limits that are annually adjusted. However, the costs of home health care, assisted living facilities or nursing homes will reduce countable income. Additionally, the applicant may not have resources deemed sufficient to pay for their own care. The VA uses an age analysis, but it is commonly believed that an applicant may retain about $80,000 in resources. There are no penalties for transferring assets to qualify for these benefits. There are two special allowances that may increase the improved disability pension. The first allowance is the Housebound allowance. The applicant must either have a disability rating of 100% disability and must be confined to his or her home or have a disability rating of 100% and an additional disability with a rating of at least 60% but with no requirement to be housebound. The second special allowance is Aid & Attendance for a veteran or eligible widow(er) who is living in a nursing home, or who needs assistance with activities of daily living at home or in an assisted living facility. In addition to these non-service-connected benefits, the VA will pay for nursing home care for veterans with severe (about 70%) service-connected disabilities. Medicaid is an additional payment option that many senior citizens rely upon. Medicaid is a state administered welfare program that pays for long-term in-home care and nursing home care. In addition to these services, the Medicaid program provides the PACE program, which provides community-based services to the elderly in an adult day care center. These services include primary medical and specialty care, nursing, social services, personal care, in-home supportive services, rehabilitative therapies, meals and nutritional care, and transportation. There are strict income and resource limitations on the qualification for Medicaid benefits. There are penalties for some gifts made within five years of applying for Medicaid assistance. With proper planning, however, it is possible to avoid impoverishment, protect your home and qualify for Medicaid long-term care assistance. Because of the high cost, many families rely on Medicaid to pay for long-term care. Oast & Hook can assist you or a family member in obtaining Medicaid eligibility while preserving assets and can assist with the preparation of the necessary applications. We publish a guide to Medicaid eligibility in Virginia. You may obtain a copy on our webpage, www.oasthook.com. When you have aging parents, how do you begin the process of assisting them with their estate, asset protection and financial planning? Begin by having a series of frank conversations (‘family meetings”) with your parents. If you have siblings, we recommend, with your parents’ permission, including them in the family meetings to avoid misunderstandings and to minimize the likelihood of family controversy. If siblings can not personally attend, you should suggest that they participate by speaker phone. A single family meeting will frequently be counter productive since trying to do too much too fast may be overwhelming. Therefore, we recommend a series of meetings with each meeting to address a different set of questions. Where there are differences of opinion among family members, frequently having a professional, such as Oast & Hook, assist with the planning and conduct of the meetings will be helpful. These conversations with your parents should include a discussion of the following:
Oast & Hook has three Certified Elder Law Attorneys (CELA) and a CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER™ professional (CFP®) who can help you develop an appropriate plan that incorporates the appropriate options for the payment of long-term care and the preservation of assets. In addition, we can help you apply for appropriate benefits or represent you if you must appeal a denial of needed benefits. INCOME TAX PLANNING The income tax cuts of the recent past were supposed to lift economic growth (which they did) faster than federal spending (which they did not). It was not even close. The resulting increase in federal debt and under funded federal entitlements such as Social Security and Medicare make it probable that income tax rates will increase. Therefore, income tax planning will become even more important in the future. However, income tax planning and return preparation is complex. It is especially complex for persons (and their families) that are nearing retirement, are retired, or are receiving long-term care. In addition to complexity, the rules frequently change. Examples of this complexity include:
These are only a few examples of the complex income tax rules confronting the elderly, disabled and their families. Oast & Hook can assist the elderly, disabled and their families with income tax planning and return preparation. INVESTMENT PLANNING Oast & Hook is frequently asked to assist our clients with financial planning for their retirement or the payment of their long-term care. Unfortunately, we often find that our clients have made significant mistakes in their investment planning. These mistakes jeopardize our clients’ ability to provide for their support during retirement, pay for necessary long-term care and to leave inheritances to their children. In some cases, the client may run out of money needed for the client’s support because of the investment mistakes. To avoid investment errors, Oast & Hook recommends that our clients:
To assist our clients with financial and investment planning, we have formed Oast & Hook Financial Services, a Registered Investment Advisor and financial planning firm which is separate from Oast & Hook, PC, which provides legal services. PERIODIC REVIEW Estate, asset protection and financial plans do not last forever. Most people should initially implement their plans at an early age and then review their plans at least annually (i.e. plan early and often). In addition, you should review your plan every time there has been a significant change in circumstances for you or your family. For example, you should review your estate and financial plan:
Many clients fail to revise their estate, asset protection and financial plans upon their divorce or prior to a second marriage. This can lead to unintended, if not disastrous, results. Timely estate planning can avoid many problems. For example, a premarital agreement before a second marriage can provide for your new spouse and protect your children’s inheritance. You should contact us whenever any of these events occur. You should also review your estate, asset protection and financial plans every time you are aware of a significant change in the laws. We address such changes in our weekly newsletter, the Oast & Hook News. Please call Oast & Hook at 757-399-7506 or leave us a message on our website, www.oasthook.com, if you would like to subscribe to the newsletter. CONCLUSION The failure to implement an effective comprehensive estate, asset protection and financial plan can wreak havoc on the client’s and the client’s family’s finances and cause unnecessary stress and expenditures of time and money. Oast & Hook specializes in assisting its clients in estate, asset protection and financial planning for the benefit of the client and his or her family.
|