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With Consideration for Those Living With Chronic Illness

Revocable Living Trusts. With Consideration for Those Living With Chronic Illness. By: Martin M. Shenkman, CPA, MBA, PFS, AEP, JD. Caveats.

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With Consideration for Those Living With Chronic Illness

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  1. Revocable Living Trusts With Consideration for Those Living With Chronic Illness By: Martin M. Shenkman, CPA, MBA, PFS, AEP, JD

  2. Caveats Nothing in these slides or any accompanying presentation is to be considered tax, legal, investment or other professional advice. The information is merely provided for educational purposes and no action should be taken without the individual consulting his or her own tax, estate, legal, financial, investment, insurance and other advisers. The hosts and sponsors of this program are NOT responsible for its content or accuracy

  3. Revocable Living Trusts - Introduction • What is this powerful document?

  4. What is a Revocable Living Trust? • Also called “Living Trust,” “Loving Trust,” or “Inter-Vivos Revocable Trust” • Revocable – you can change it anytime • Can be used to avoid probate but this popular goal is not the key benefit of this technique • Use to consolidate and manage your assets during disability • It is the most powerful tool to manage assets if you cannot do so

  5. Tips: Revocable Living Trust • Your will and power of attorney must be coordinated • Boilerplate trusts designed to avoid probate won’t accomplish your goals • Focus of document should be protecting you and communicating your wishes as your disease progresses • Tailor trustee replacement, disability and other provisions to the nuances of your anticipated disease course • Assets must be transferred to the trust to gain the most benefit – but some assets should not be transferred (e.g., IRA).

  6. Tailor your Revocable Trust Planning to Your Needs • Every person is unique – it has to be your plan, your trust, and address your challenges • Reflect your personal wishes and circumstances • Tailor the document to address your unique assets (e.g. a closely held business)

  7. Chronic Illness is Common – “Trust” Now Don’t Wait 120 million Americans are living with chronic illness or disability By 2020, about 157 million Americans will be afflicted by chronic illnesses 26% of those ages 65-74 have had their lives significantly impacted by chronic illness 50% of those age 85 and older have had some cognitive impairment 9 million people are cancer survivors with various side effects from treatment A living trust plan created early after your diagnosis with a chronic illness can protect you and your loved ones

  8. Watch Out For Hyperbole and Sales Pitches • There are many hucksters pushing living trusts to play on peoples fears of probate and taxes • Only 5,600 estates a year will pay a federal estate tax – few are affected (but state estate tax may still bite) • Tax savings can be accomplished in a will or by planning, a living trust is not necessary for this • Probate is not as costly, difficult or ‘evil’ as often portrayed by those hustling trusts • The above detract from the most powerful use of a living trust – namely managing assets in disability

  9. Revocable Living Trusts – Plan your Trust Agreement • How to plan your trust document

  10. Create Your Revocable Living Trust • Establish a personalized (not boilerplate) living trust • Include provisions to address your specific health issues • Avoid probate and intestacy • Manage assets during disability or illness

  11. Living Trust – What do you Need • Trust agreement – a contract between you and the trustee (which might be you, but read on) • Tax identification number (but check with your CPA) • Documents to transfer assets to your living trust once signed • Paperwork to open a trust bank account

  12. Living Trust – Naming Trustees • Who should be trustee? • Should you name two co-trustees at inception? • Should you be a trustee? • Who should be successor trustees? • When should successor trustees step in?

  13. Living Trust – Different Time Periods to Address • Your living trust might have different provisions to address different time periods more specifically • #1 You’re alive and well – you might be a sole or co-trustee and simply manage assets in the trust name • #2 You’re disabled – a co-trustee and successor might take over • #3 After death – it will function like a will disposing of your assets

  14. Living Trust – Special Trustee Provisions for Chronic Illness • Perhaps you should remain a co-trustee to stay in control of your finances but have a co-trustee that can act if you have an attack or are hospitalized • Standard language removing a trustee who is “disabled” may not suffice perhaps the co-trustee can be authorized to take certain actions alone if you cannot act • Consider a 30 day disability period so a short hospitalization won’t affect it

  15. Living Trust – Special Distribution Provisions for Chronic Illness • Include details as to the care and other decisions you want to guide or control the trustees when you are not able to serve • Direct the trustee to pay for medical care decisions authorized or directed by your health care agent (to avoid conflicts) • If you should not serve as trustee consider a small dollar bank account outside the trust to enable you to shop and spend reasonably without jeopardizing the trust assets

  16. Living Trusts – Hire a Lawyer • Be very wary of internet forms – they are limited in how they can be tailored and won’t address your special circumstances (e.g. chronic illness) • You can fill out forms cheap on line but even if the forms were good – you can’t get a website or cheap form to substitute for decades + of real experience • Hire an attorney in your state that devotes a substantial portion of his or her practice to estate and trust planning • If the attorney cannot tell you reasons not to use a trust, as well as reasons to use a trust, go elsewhere – no decisions are absolute

  17. RV Tips – Planning Your Living Trust • Hire a lawyer in the state you claim is where you reside and are domiciled – that is a tie to that state to support your position (but alone will never be enough, its just one factor) • Rv’ers, or anyone who facing tax uncertainty as to which state they reside in (or in which they are domiciled), should consider the address designated in their trust and which state law is indicated to apply • Where are the assets are that will be transferred to the trust • Where should you sign your trust – in the state you claim is your residence and domicile • Can you use formalities for your trust that are more likely to be accepted in other states (e.g., 3 witnesses and a notary)

  18. Revocable Living Trusts – Get Organized • Keeping the confusing names of legal documents clear

  19. Organize Emergency, Financial, Information and Advisors Information • Without organization your trust will be of marginal help • Contact People (names, numbers) • Financial Information (account information) • Passwords and Security Codes • Documents (Estate planning documents, legal documents, and more) • Budget and Plan

  20. Financial Information is Critical to Organize for your Trust to Succeed • Title to Accounts • Change appropriate assets to your trust • Don’t transfer IRAs, professional practices and other inappropriate assets • Beneficiary designations • Coordinate with trust beneficiary provisions for assets transferred • Account Management • Duplicate statements • Consolidation and simplification • Automation • Organizing records • On line payments • Automatic deposits • A trust without more is not enough

  21. RV Tips on Organizing Financial Info and Using Living Trusts • Rv’ers, or anyone who travels extensively, should take extra precautions to make sure information is available when needed • When determining where to keep accounts consider tax issues of residency/domicile • Consider transferring all permitted (appropriate) assets to your living trust but retaining a bank account in your own name in the state where you believe you are domiciled • Ask an attorney in the state where you own real estate or tangible property (collectibles) if transferring the assets to your trust will be sufficient to cut tax ties to that state (it may avoid probate but not solve your state income or estate tax issue)

  22. Revocable Living Trusts – Relationship to Other Documents • Keeping the confusing names of legal documents clear

  23. Overview of Estate Planning and Living Trusts Powers of Attorney Only relevant to assets not transferred to your living trust Why standard forms aren’t suffice Special provisions to include to coordinate with living trust Living Wills Trustee of living trust might fund medical bills Address specific health issues Experimental procedures Organ and tissue donations • Health Proxies • Selecting agent • What is different for you if you live with chronic illness • Trustee should follow agent’s health care directions • Revocable Living Trusts • Often the keystone of your plan • Boilerplate forms rarely address nuances needed • Coordinate with other documents

  24. How does a living trust compare to a will and power of attorney? • Will – disposes of your assets after death • Power of attorney gives an agent authority to handle certain legal and tax matters while you are alive and often while you are disabled • Living trust can address both and catch gaps in the other documents – trustee holds legal title to your assets and may be able to act more quickly and with less issues than an agent under a power of attorney

  25. Will: Consider a Pour Over Will Your will might designate that your assets should be distributed to your trust

  26. Revocable Living Trusts – Ancillary Steps • Follow up steps must be addressed to make your living trust plan works

  27. RV Tips for Living Trusts • Using a living trust can consolidate assets, minimize the likelihood of other states claiming that their law applies, and make management of your assets easier by a family member or friend who lives at a distance from where you are – but you have to get assets transferred to the trust (watch which ones) to accomplish this • Living trusts alone will not suffice for many planning needs -- you might benefit from a limited liability company to own real estate or tangibles – consult a lawyer in the state where the assets are located, in addition to the lawyer you hire in the state you claim is your domicile

  28. Insurance Coverage May Have to Be Updated • Property, casualty, liability insurance • If assets are transferred to your trust update coverage

  29. Insurance Coverage Considerations • Don’t make assumptions – get every insurance coverage reviewed before transferring an asset to your trust, and at least every 2 years • You might need to name the trustee and trust as owner of your home to assure proper coverage

  30. Beneficiary Designations May Need Updating • Consider all beneficiary designations for assets transferred to your living trust – the trust is a new account and you’ll need forms • Obtain copies of the forms you file and keep them with trust records • Note: IRA, pension (and often life insurance) should generally not be transferred to your trust

  31. Revocable Living Trusts – Consider Everyone Affected • Family, loved ones, trustees must all be considered to make your living trust plan work

  32. Provide for Loved Ones • While the discussions above focused on using a living trust to protect you, also be sure to provide for your loved ones

  33. Communicate • Educate and inform your fiduciaries • Preparation of beneficiaries Having a real conversation is one of the most important steps you can take

  34. Communication Tips • Explain your finances, family, care, disease, and so forth to your advisers – tell all so they can help properly • Discuss with family, friends or others involved in your life what help you might need • Can the trustee you named really be counted on? Have alternatives • Express your wishes in face to face meetings and then confirm key points in writing

  35. Revocable Living Trusts – It’s a Process • Monitor, review and revise regularly

  36. Review, Revisit, Revise • Nothing remains static • Tax and property laws • Family situations • Assets and net worth • Health

  37. Revocable Living Trusts – Get Started Planning is great – but implement!

  38. Make an Action Plan And Get Started

  39. Protect yourself and your loved ones

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