If your goal is to look out for your loved ones, consider tackling these estate-planning additional jobs.
Estate planning is the easiest financial planning to-do to put off. It’s certainly not fun to ponder your own mortality, and yet that’s the very nature of estate planning. Lawyers are often involved, so it can be hard to get it done on the cheap. And while most financial planning jobs provide at least some payoff during your lifetime, estate planning isn’t as much for you as it is for your loved ones.
It’s no wonder that so many individuals put off creating or updating on an estate plan. But anecdotally, at least, the pandemic seems to be lighting a fire under some people to get serious about creating or updating their estate plans once and for all.
Making sure you have the key estate planning documents in place is important; that means a will, powers of attorney for healthcare and financial matters, and guardianships for minor children, first and foremost. Trusts may also make sense in certain situations. But there are other add-ons that you can think about in the context of your estate plan, especially if your goal is to make life as easy for your loved ones as possible and to ensure that your wishes are carried out after your death. In contrast with a traditional estate plan, you can craft at least some of these documents on your own, without the aid of a solicitor.
- A Financial Overview
- Our estate plan (in very broad outlines: where to find the documents and who the key agents are - POAs and executors).
- Our key financial assets (no dollar amounts or account numbers; just where we hold the accounts and who owns them).
- Our insurance coverage (property/casualty, health, life).
- Our house (property ID number, whether there’s a mortgage).
- Cars (VIN numbers, whether there are car payments).
- Regular household bills that we pay.
- A Master Directory
- A Plan for Your Personal Property
- A Plan for Your Pets
- A Digital Estate Plan
- A Plan for the End of Life
- An Ethical Will
This article is general information and does not consider the circumstances of any investor. Minor editing has been made to the original US version for an Australian audience.