July 23, 2014. You have signed all of your estate planning documents and, if your plan includes a Trust, completed its funding. You sit back, relax, and enjoy the peace of mind that comes with completing that task. But don’t bask in that feeling for too long—estate planning is an ongoing process, not a one-time event.
Your estate plan is designed in light of what is known at the time; a snapshot, if you will, of you, your family, your financial situation, and the tax laws as they existed and were anticipated to change in the future at the time it was prepared. All of those things do change during your lifetime, and often in ways that were not anticipated. When the unanticipated happens, your estate plan will need to change, to adjust.
It is unreasonable to expect that a basic Will-based plan created when you were a newlywed living in an apartment would still be all you need when you have children, a home, and a business. Life’s curve balls - such as a divorce, a loved one who has special needs, or changes in the tax laws can also make plan adjustments advisable.
Maintaining an estate plan has been compared to maintaining an automobile. Both need periodic attention if you expect them to perform the way you want when you need them. While a car will have time and mileage checkpoints for servicing, your estate plan will have event checkpoints and should be checked periodically, too.
Generally, any significant change in your personal, family, financial or health situation, or a change in the tax laws should prompt an estate plan review.
The following list can be used as a guide, but is by no means all-inclusive:
1. Personal and family changes:
2. Family finances changes:
3. Other Changes:
Changes Your Estate Plan Might Need
These will vary according to the circumstances in which you find yourself at the time. As before, the following can be used as a guide to stir your thoughts, but it is by no means a complete list:
You need an estate planning lawyer’s advice to make an estate plan and you need the same kind of lawyer’s advice and assistance to change one. Trying to make a change yourself by writing on your original plan documents is a sure-fire recipe for disaster. Maybe your changes won’t be valid. Maybe they will actually void your plan documents altogether. Maybe they will lead to confusion that will require a judge and jury to straighten out. Maybe the change will have tax consequences you didn’t anticipate.
Your estate planning lawyer will be able to provide critical guidance you need to make the appropriate changes to your plan, thus giving you peace of mind that everything has been done correctly. And that will put you back where you were when we started this conversation: sitting back, relaxing, and basking in that peace of mind that comes with knowing that you have just the planning you need…at least until the next change comes along.
Estate planning is an ongoing process. Your estate plan needs to be changed, adjusted, and adapted as you move through the events of your life. Keeping your estate plan up to date will give both you and your family assurance that it will work the way you want whenever it is needed. And that is one of the most thoughtful and considerate things you can do for yourself and those you love.
Contact Goosmann Trust Law Counsel to assist you in making sure you estate plan is still current or visit www.EstatePlanning.com for more information and for up-to-date news about estate planning and related topics. Contact Goosmann Trust Law Counsel at info@goosmannlaw.com or call 712-226-4000.