NJ Estate Plan Checklist


Your estate plan is an investment in you and your family’s future. As years pass, your family may grow, your assets will change, and new laws will be passed. We recommend all of our clients review their estate planning documents once every three to six years.
 

This Checklist focuses on the foundation of your estate plan, including documents such as a Last Will and Testament, Revocable Trust, General Durable Power of Attorney and Living Will. (Note that references to a “Will” on this Checklist are generally interchangeable with the term “Revocable Trust”, which can also be used as the centerpiece of an estate plan.)  However, irrevocable trusts - such as a Life Insurance Trust - and other estate planning vehicles should also be reviewed periodically to see if they are performing as expected.


Below are some questions YOU should ask yourself when reviewing your existing estate plan documents. The entire article can be found on our website, www.hnlawfirm.com under “Free Stuff”.
 


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• Do you have a (i) Last Will and Testament, (ii) Revocable Trust, (iii) General Durable Power of Attorney, and (iv) Health Care Power of Attorney/Health Care Proxy/Living Will? Every complete estate plan must contain at least three of these documents.


• Have you moved since you last updated your estate planning documents? If you moved from one state to another, there may be questions of the interpretation or validity of your existing estate planning documents in your new state of residence.


Generally, estate planning documents executed in one state will be valid in another state, but your new state of residence may have specific statutes or tax laws that are not addressed in your existing estate planning documents. You may want to contact an attorney in your new state or residence to advise you as to what might need to be updated.


• Do you have a separate personal property designation? This is a separate writing where you indicate who should receive specific items of your personal property such as photographs, jewelry, art work, etc. If you have one, you should review it and make sure that it is still an expression of your wishes. If you don’t have a personal property designation, you may want to consider creating one so that specific items will go to specific people.


• Is any person receiving your personal property a minor (under 18)? If so, your estate plan should make provisions for that property to be held by the minor’s Guardian until he or she attains an appropriate age.


• Do you have any specific gifts or bequests you want to make? Any gift of a cash amount or of an asset other than personal property should be stated in your Will. If you have given away a specific asset to a person in your existing Will (i.e. your shore house), be sure that the asset still exists. Also, your Will should provide for what happens if the specific asset is sold during your lifetime.


• Are your total combined assets, including life insurance death benefits, greater than $675,OOO? If so, there may be a New Jersey Estate Tax imposed at your death. Both Federal and New Jersey Estate Taxes can be reduced or even eliminated with appropriate estate tax planning. If you are married, both spouses’ assets should be totaled together to see if they exceed $675,000. If you have a taxable estate your estate plan should contain trusts or other provisions to reduce taxes.


We can help you in all aspects of elder care, asset protection and tax reduction law. Don't wait until it's too late to plan for the future. Call Fredrick P. Niemann, Esq. at 732-863-9900 or e-mail him at fniemann@scarincihollenbeck.com today and speak to him personally. He welcomes your call.

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NJ Estate Planning Attorney serving these New Jersey Counties:


Monmouth, Ocean, Mercer, Middlesex, Bergen, Burlington, Union



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This site is about Estate Planning Lawyers in NJ. © 2010 Hanlon Neimann