If you’re like many of our clients, it’s not enough to simply grow your assets. You also want to ensure those assets are available following your death to support your loved ones and the causes most important to you. We’re here to help ensure your estate planning goals are carried out according to your wishes.
Once our estate specialists understand your specific goals, we'll work with you to identify the right combination of documents to properly protect your assets and provide financial well-being for your loved ones.
At Creative Planning, our wealth managers collaborate with a team of in-house attorneys who draft custom trust and estate planning documents to help ensure your wishes are fully integrated with your financial plan.
Protect Assets
Manage Division of Assets
Avoid Probate
Maintain Privacy
Save Taxes
Pass Along More Wealth
Creative Planning offers a comprehensive suite of estate planning services designed to complement your financial plan. Your customized plan may consist of some or all of the below, depending on your situation:
Wills
Durable Powers of Attorney
Healthcare Powers of Attorney
Living Wills
Revocable Living Trusts
Irrevocable Trusts
Life Insurance Trusts
Charitable Trusts
Foundations
Special Needs Trusts
TAKE A CLOSER LOOK
This is one of the most common estate planning questions we receive. Let us shed some light on the topic via this general overview:
A key estate planning objective is to avoid the probate process. If you use only a will, chances are good your remaining assets will pass through probate.
When you pass away, taxes will likely need to be paid at several levels (from local probate taxes to the federal estate tax). Using a trust allows you to anticipate these taxes.
Wills are only relevant after the decedent has passed. Trusts (living trusts in particular) can be effective while you’re alive if you become unable to manage your own finances.
A trust must own assets for it to work, which means you must retitle your assets in the trust’s name while you’re alive. When you use a will, assets remain in your name until you pass; afterward, the executor is responsible for retitling them to your estate.
As mentioned in #3 above, wills are only effective upon your death, so their usefulness is limited to the transfer of assets at that time. Trusts allow for more customization and can be written to suit almost any goal.
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