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3 Estate Planning Secrets the Wealthy Use That You Can Too!
Strategies to Enhance Your Success Estate planning is complex and continually evolving. Often, affluent families are “early adopters” of the newest and best estate planning strategies. Luckily, by working with us, you can benefit from the same estate planning strategies that affluent families do. Here are a few techniques we should discuss soon. - Maintain an up-to-date, trust-centered plan
The foundation of your estate plan must achieve your goals and needs. Wealthy people tend to utilize estate plans with all assets funded into or aligned with trusts. Not only should your estate plan be trust-centered, but it should also be continually updated as your life, family circumstances, and the law grow and change. Make sure your current estate plan always reflects your goals—a tried-and-true secret of the affluent. - Create special trusts for special assets
Wealthy people take advantage of the legal and tax opportunities presented by unique assets or investments. Many types of assets, such as IRAs, life insurance, business ownership, and more, require specialized planning to work properly in your estate plan. If you’ve saved for retirement, you know the value of an IRA, a 401(k) or another retirement plan. You are probably also familiar with the beneficiary designations for these plans. But, you may not be familiar with a specialized trust, called a standalone retirement trust or IRA trust. This trust lays out exact instructions about where the money in your IRA will go after you’re gone. If you’ve seen substantial accumulation in your IRA, you may not want its entirety to be disbursed to a beneficiary all at once. You’ve worked a lifetime to save, and the IRA trust empowers you to protect what you’re leaving behind. In a similar fashion, life insurance trusts give you more control over your life insurance benefits, allowing you to direct what occurs to your life insurance policy in more detail than is possible with a plain beneficiary form. It can be risky to name your minor children as the beneficiaries of your policy. If your children are not yet adults, the insurance company often requires a court-appointed guardian to receive the funds, a potentially costly and lengthy process. Many people may decide to leave the policy benefits directly to the children’s caretaker to avoid this guardianship issue. But, leaving the policy benefits to your children’s caretaker outright doesn’t ensure that the money is used for the benefit of your children. A life insurance trust can protect what you’re leaving behind and ensure it is used for the benefit of your beneficiaries. Unlike a plain beneficiary designation, a trust also lets you designate specific uses for your money by your beneficiaries, such as educational funding. The wealthy don’t leave these things to chance and instead use proactive trust-centered planning to achieve their goals and protect their families - Build a collaborative professional team
Wealthy people rarely plan and work with professionals in isolation. They know they can get better outcomes by meshing their legal, tax, and financial plans together. Rather than silo their strategies with various advisors, they ensure their team is optimizing their results through a collaborative approach. As you build out your team, seek out professionals who are enthusiastic about working with one another across disciplines. The more visibility they have into one another’s strategies, the better they’ll be able to provide you with the best possible benefits. Call us today. We can discuss the best ways to put these and other estate planning approaches of the wealthy into action for you.
Waypoint Estate and Business Planning assists clients in the greater Chicago area including Lincolnshire, Mundelein, Vernon Hills, Lake Bluff, Grayslake, North Chicago, Lake Forest. Gurnee, Libertyville, Long Grove, Lake Zurich, Buffalo Grove, Northbrook, Deerfield, Glenview, Naperville, Wheaton, Yorkville, Algonquin, Huntley, Crystal Lake, Winnetka, Hawthorn Woods, Wilmette, Skokie, Wauconda and Wadsworth in Lake County, Cook County, DuPage County and McHenry County, Illinois.
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