Why Some Incentive Trusts Fail
Incentive trusts are a popular way for people to encourage good behavior from their heirs. However, incentive trusts have limitations and you should be aware of them. read more
Incentive trusts are a popular way for people to encourage good behavior from their heirs. However, incentive trusts have limitations and you should be aware of them. read more
If you give a teenager a large sum of money and tell him or her that it can be spent however the teen wants, you can guarantee that a large portion of it will be wasted if not all of it. It is no different for teenagers who receive extremely large inheritances. read more
Over the years, we’ve discovered that many people make a BIG mistake, catapulting their assets and loved ones right into the court system. Most of our clients want to avoid probate because it has a reputation for being expensive, time consuming, stressful – and public, meaning anyone anywhere can see who got what and how to contact them. Beneficiaries may become victims to nosey neighbors, predators, and unscrupulous “charities.”
Q: What’s the one mistake that causes all these problems?
A: An unfunded trust.
In this issue you will learn:
• What it means to fund your trust
• What happens to assets left out of your trust
• Which assets should, and should not, be funded into your trust
• How funding your trust will ensure your final wishes are carried out and save your loved ones valuable time, money, and the frustration of going to court – while preserving privacy
What Does it Mean to Fund Your Trust?
Funding a trust is simply the process of transferring assets from your name into the name of your trust. Often, beneficiary designations are changed to your trust as well.
Funding is accomplished in three ways:
1. Changing the title of the asset from your individual name (or joint names if you’re married) to the name of your trust – for example, from Jane Smith to Jane Smith, Trustee of the Jane Smith Living Trust dated January 1, 2016.
2. Assigning your interest in an asset without a title (such as artwork, jewelry, collectibles or antiques) to your trust.
3. Changing the primary or contingent beneficiary of the asset to your trust. Think life insurance, retirement accounts, and annuities.
Planning Tip: Put together a list of your assets, their values, and locations, then start funding the most valuable ones and work your way down. Keep plugging away until your trust is fully funded. Our office can help.
What Happens to Assets Left Out of Your Trust?
For many people, avoiding probate court is a main reason they set up a revocable living trust in the first place. Unfortunately, you are not “done” when the trust documents are signed. If you don’t take the next step to fund, probate court is guaranteed.
WARNING: If your trust is left unfunded, you will send your family and assets into probate court.
Which Assets Should, and Should Not, Be Funded Into Your Trust?
In general, you will probably want to fund the following assets into your trust:
• Real estate – homes, rental properties, vacant land and timeshares
• Bank and credit union accounts – checking, savings, CDs
• Safe deposit boxes
• Investment accounts – brokerage, agency, custody
• Notes payable to you
• Life insurance – if you don’t have an irrevocable life insurance trust
• Business interests
• Intellectual property
• Oil and gas interests
• Personal effects – artwork, jewelry, collectibles, antiques
On the other hand, you will probably not want to fund the following assets into your trust:
• IRAs and other tax-deferred retirement accounts – only the beneficiary should be changed
• Incentive stock options and Section 1244 stock
• Interests in professional corporations
• Foreign assets – in some countries funding an asset into a U.S.-based trust causes adverse tax consequences, while in other countries trusts aren’t recognized or are ignored due to forced heirship laws
• UTMA and UGMA accounts – your minor grandchild is the owner, not you as the custodian; instead, name a successor custodian
• Cars, trucks boats, motorcycles and scooters – most states allow a small amount of assets, including vehicles, to pass outside of probate, in others a beneficiary can be designated for vehicles, and in others, vehicles don’t have to go through probate at all
Planning Tip: Work closely with your estate planning attorney to determine what should go into your trust and what should stay out. Our office can help.
What Are the Benefits of Trust Funding?
Funding your trust makes it possible to obtain trust benefits:
• Your trust is easy to update.
• Your trustee, instead of a judge, will take control of your trust assets if you become incapacitated or die.
• Your trustee will have direct access to your trust assets without a court order.
• Your trustee will be empowered to pay bills and manage, invest, sell, and reinvest your trust assets without court intervention.
• Your private wishes will remain private instead of being publicized.
• Settlement time, costs, and frustration are reduced.
The Bottom Line on Trust Funding
A trust has a myriad of benefits, including probate avoidance. Yet, in the end, an unfunded trust doesn’t avoid probate.
ACT NOW: Contact our office now at www.ssslegalconsultancy.com and we’ll help you make sure your assets are owned properly and that your trust is up to date.
Integrated Health.
Sounds nice. What does it mean?
Dictionary.com defines integrated as “combining or coordinating
separate elements so as to provide a harmonious, interrelated whole.”
Given this
definition, integrated health can be defined as “the health that exists when there
is health within each of the composite areas that comprise a human life.”
Within each
human life, there is the level of the individual as a distinct entity, and then
the integration and coordination of that entity within a group or society.
Using the
definition above, integrated health within an individual is when the mental, emotional,
physical, and for some, spiritual dimensions are adequately tended to and in
effective communication and coordination with one another.
By way of
example, everyone has experienced being physically ill and noticing that it
affects your emotional and mental condition.
For some
people, if they are in a struggle with their spiritual life, whether that is a
particular religious affiliation, or another spiritual orientation, that
struggle will translate into angst in the mind, emotions, and even body.
It is now
widely understood and accepted in all fields of medicine that emotional and mental
distress negatively impact physical health.
These minor,
every-day, commonplace, examples demonstrate how each part affects the
whole. This means that if you are in
ill-health in one area, it will influence the other areas. There is an inherent interconnection within individuals
where each component affects every other area.
Let’s call this individual level the “internal landscape”.
Each
individual sits within a group or a society.
At the group level there are external arenas within which each
individual must operate. Integrated Health
requires health not only at the individual level, but also at the junction
point between the individual and the group/society.
The elements
of the societal level include financial, legal, political, and social
components. Effective coordination of
the individual with these external components is essential.
Imagine, for
example, that you or your friend is going through financial difficulty and her
house is in danger of foreclosure. It
goes without saying that this will have a profound effect on her mental,
emotional, and physical health. What
about if you or your friend are involved in a law suit? Or what happens when political changes impact
your lifestyle or your love ones?
One of the most important components of integrated
health is the social component: friends, colleagues, professional affiliations,
familial relationships. Again, just
consider going to work after a heated argument with your spouse, or finding out
that your child is ill. Imagine the
impact on your mental, emotional, and physical state. It could even impact your financial life.
Once you have a framework for thinking about
Integrated Health, you can begin to focus on which areas need attention. As one area improves and develops, it has a
beneficial effect on all other areas. As
the whole strengthens, it will have a buffering effect on the composite parts,
which means that if one area is struck unexpectedly by difficulty, the strength
of the whole can more easily withstand the weakness of an individual component.
Take a minute and think about these areas within
yourself and your life. Where are the
strengths and weaknesses in your Internal Landscape? Where are the strengths and weaknesses in
your External Landscape?
Remember, Integrated Health is what results when
each composite part is combined and coordinated in an effective and cooperative
way.
What components can you commit to strengthening in
the next three months? The next six
months? What can be strengthened over
the next year? What can be developed
over the next five years?
This step-by-step approach allows you to gradually strengthen
each composite part and therefore, overtime, strengthen the whole.
That is Integrated Health.
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