Tuesday, January 28, 2014

Estate Planning For The 99%

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Lawyers and wealth managers who specialize in passing assets to the next generation love to brag about their ultra high net worth clients. But privately they admit that many (or most) of those who seek their help with wills and trusts don’t fall in this category. And lately they would have us believe that tax planning for these folks, most notably those with assets in the $5 million to $10 million range, is very, very, challenging.
That was one of the continuing themes last week at the Heckerling Institute on Estate Planning in Orlando, the annual Super Bowl on the subject. The catalyst for the discussion among the 2,900 lawyers, accountants and insurance pros gathered there, was a planning device that Congress introduced on an interim basis starting in 2011 and made permanent with the American Taxpayer Relief Tax Act of 2012. Tax geeks dubbed it “portability.”
Despite its wonky name (which mind you does not actually appear in the tax code so don’t blame Congress for this particular jargon), portability solved a pressing problem and had all the hallmarks of a consumer-friendly new rule for the 99%. In a nutshell, the law made it possible for widows and widowers to carry over the estate tax exemption of the spouse who died most recently and add it to their own. The tax law refers to the sum carried over as the “deceased spousal unused exclusion amount.” In common parlance it has become known by the short-hand, “the DSUE amount.”
At current rates this enables married couples to transfer $5.34 million apiece ($10.68 million together) tax-free. This tax-free amount (also called the “exclusion” or “exemption”), which is adjusted for inflation, will reach $6.58 million 10 years from now, and $8.95 million in 20 years, according to projections by Bernstein Global Wealth Management.
Public service announcement: To take advantage of this option or “elect portability” (in legal lingo), the executor handling the estate of the spouse who died must file an estate tax return (Internal Revenue Service Form 706), even if no tax is due. This return is due nine months after death with a six-month extension allowed. (For questions and answers about other aspects of portability, see “A Married Couple’s Guide To Estate Planning.”)

Medi-Cal Explained

The California Medical Assistance Program (AKA Medi-Cal) allows certain residents to seek medical benefits. Those who usually qualify for Medi-Cal benefits include families, seniors, people with disabilities, foster care children, pregnant women, or people suffering from diseases like tuberculosis, breast cancer or HIV/AIDS.  The California Department of Health Care Services (DHCS) and the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) jointly support Medi-Cal.  Many services covered are administered on a county level of California.

To read more check out this estate planning attorney in Orange County's blog:

 http://blog.tompkins-law.com/2014/01/an-estate-planning-attorney-answers.html

An Estate Planning Attorney of Orange County - The Difference Between Living Trusts and Wills

Wednesday, January 15, 2014

Evaluating Your Estate Plan

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INDEPENDENCE – Talking about estate planning is difficult and implementing an estate plan can be even harder. Questions often include: Who needs to be involved? What information do I need to gather? When is it the right time to start? Where do I start? How do I decide what to do? The Evaluating Your Estate Plan program can help in the planning process.
The Evaluating Your Estate Plan workshop will be held Wednesday, Jan. 29, at Heartland Acres Events Center, 2600 Swan Lake Boulevard, Independence, with registration starting at 9 a.m. The program runs from 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. The program will answer estate planning questions and helps prepare participants to work with their estate planning team.
The presenters for the program include Kelvin Leibold and Melissa O’Rourke, Iowa State University Extension and Outreach farm and business management specialists. O’Rourke is an attorney experienced in agricultural law and estate planning. Leibold joined ISU Extension in 1987 and has vast experience in working with agricultural clients in farm and business planning.

The one-day workshop will cover the language of estate planning, gift, estate and inheritance taxes, calculating retirement costs, and many other areas vital to creating a good estate plan. The workshops help those who are confused about building a plan for transferring farm assets or unsure what options are best for their farm operation and family.

What do you do With Assets Outside of California?

The whole point of estate planning is to have an orderly and seamless transfer of assets and property to their designated beneficiaries when they die.  A well executed will or living trust can ensure this.  The important thing to realize is that having a will might give you some problems if you own properties outside California.  This living trust attorney in Orange County reveals what you should do to protect the assets you own outside the state of California.

Click the link below.


Wednesday, January 8, 2014

Estate Planning in 2014: How to Get It Done

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Estate planning is one of the tasks that many people seem never to get done. Yet as the new year gets rolling, now is a great time to address this key element of your financial planning.
In the following video, Dan Caplinger, The Motley Fool's director of investment planning, talks about the essentials of getting estate planning done. Dan points to key documents like your will, durable powers of attorney, and health-care directives as essential first steps toward building an estate plan that will protect you and your family. Dan goes on to discuss how those with children will want to protect them with guardians and trusts, and he concludes with advice on checking your beneficiary designations to ensure all your assets go where you want them to go. Dan concludes that estate planning isn't hard once you actually get started.