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Casey Law Group
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    • Probate, Estate & Trust Administration
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Planning for Millennials

Millennials (born 1981 to 1996) are well known for their distinctiveness as a group. They have followed paths and set goals that are decidedly different from those chosen by previous generations. They are highly diverse, better educated, more socially conscious, and wait longer to have families than their parents and grandparents. But one thing millennials have in common with other generational groups is the need for estate planning. Unfortunately, a startling 79% of millennials do not have basic estate plans in place. Their needs and goals may vary, but having an estate plan in place is crucial for every adult, including millennials. Whether your clients are young or old, they do not know what the future holds, and together, we can help them put plans in place that not only provide for their own future needs but also those of their loved ones.

Will and/or Trust

Millennials may not have accumulated as much wealth as older Americans, but it is important for them to make sure that their assets will go to the family members or loved ones they have chosen at their death. If they do not have a will or trust, their assets will pass to the person designated by the state intestacy statute, which may not be the person they would want to inherit their prized possessions and money. In addition, if they are married and have young children, they need to take steps to ensure that their spouse and children are provided for. A trust is often the best solution: If the millennial client’s spouse inherits their money and property outright under a will and the spouse eventually remarries, it could go to the second spouse instead of your client’s children. In addition, the inheritance will be vulnerable to claims made by the spouse’s creditors. A trust can avoid these results by allowing the client to choose who receives their property and money, as well as the timing and size of the gifts the beneficiaries receive.

Pet trust. Many millennials, especially those who live in large urban areas, are choosing either to delay having children or to remain childless. Many of those childless millennials adopt pets who become as beloved and doted upon as if they were children. Those clients, especially if they are single, should consider a pet trust to provide for their pet’s care if something happens to them. This can include if the client dies or is physically unable to care for the pet themselves. The pet trust can not only specify a caregiver for their pet, but also provide care instructions and set aside funds sufficient to care for the pet’s needs (medical care, grooming, exercise, etc.). If a substantial amount of money is being left for the benefit of the pet, an additional person can be appointed to solely manage the money.

Charitable remainder trust. Millennials are well known for being socially conscious and wanting to make a positive difference in the world. If your millennial clients want their money and possessions to support a charitable cause when they pass away, they may be interested in establishing a charitable remainder trust, which enables them to benefit from a stream of income for their own life, with the remainder of the assets in the trust going to a charity they have selected upon their death.

Planning for Student Loans or Credit Card Debt

As the cost of college tuition continues to increase, the level of debt millennials have begun their adult lives with is startlingly high. The average student loan debt of adults aged 25 to 34 is $33,000 per borrower. Federal student loans typically are forgiven upon the borrower’s death, but the estates of borrowers who obtained private loans can be pursued by those lenders. In addition, high credit card debt is prevalent among millennials. Life insurance sufficient to cover income tax on the cancellation of debt in the case of a federal student loan or to cover the debt itself if a student loan is owed to a private lender or if money is owed to a credit card company may be a good solution for millennials who are concerned about the burden their debt could place on their loved ones upon their death.

Digital Assets

Millennials, as the first generation who grew up using the internet, have typically amassed a much greater quantity of digital assets than members of previous generations. These assets may include social media accounts, blogs, photographs and videos, financial accounts, and email accounts, among many others. A comprehensive list of these of these assets, which may be among your clients’ most prized possessions, as well as the accompanying usernames and passwords, and instructions for their management, is essential to ensure that their wishes are honored if they pass away or become too ill to manage them on their own. Depending upon your clients’ wishes, they can appoint a separate person to wind up (or continue managing, e.g., in the case of a blog) these assets and accounts, or they can choose to have their executor or trustee handle this aspect of their estate. The list, which can be incorporated into your clients’ other estate planning documents by reference, should be stored in a secure place along with their will and/or trust.

Powers of Attorney

Medical power of attorney. Young adults may not realize that their parents no longer automatically have the right to make medical decisions on their behalf if they become too ill to make them or if they are unable to communicate their wishes. Even if they are married, their spouse still needs to be properly designated using a medical power of attorney in order to make decisions for them. It is also important to designate a trusted person to act on their behalf if the spouse is unavailable. If they fail to designate a trusted person to make medical decisions for them if, e.g., they are in an automobile accident and are unconscious, a court proceeding may be necessary to appoint someone to fill that role. Your millennial clients should also consider completing a living will spelling out their wishes regarding medical treatments they want–or don’t want–at the end of their life or if they are in a persistent vegetative state.

Financial power of attorney. Another document that is essential for your clients’ care if they were to become unconscious or too ill to make their own financial decisions is a financial power of attorney. It allows the person they have named to pay bills, take care of their home, manage their accounts, and make other money-related decisions. Even for clients who are married, a financial power of attorney is important because any bank accounts or other property that are not jointly owned cannot be managed by the spouse without it—unless the spouse goes to court and asks to be appointed as your client’s guardian, causing unnecessary stress in an already distressing situation. A financial power of attorney can also be helpful for those millennials who do a lot of international travel and may occasionally need someone to handle financial matters while they are out of the country.

Let’s Collaborate for the Benefit of Your Millennial Clients

Millennials may think that estate planning is only for the elderly. However, regardless of whether they have accumulated much money or property, an estate plan is crucial, not only for the well-being of their families, loved ones, and pets, but also to put plans in place in case they become ill or are severely injured and cannot make medical and financial decisions for themselves. You can add value to them as an advisor by educating them about the benefits of planning ahead and the increased stress and heartache that their loved ones will likely face if they become incapacitated or die without a comprehensive estate plan. Let’s work together to help your millennial clients prepare for the future.

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    • Are there other ways of leaving property to my beneficiaries other than through a will or a trust?
    • Are there things I can do to protect my existing business?
    • Can any attorney create a family wealth trust?
    • Can I leave my property to anyone I choose? 
    • Can I make provision in my will for my pets?
    • Can I specify that certain people, like a brother or sister, should never receive any of my property?
    • Can I transfer real estate into a family wealth trust?
    • Can I use my will to name a guardian to care for my young children and mage their property?
    • Can I use my will to name a guardian to care for young children and manage their property?
    • Can my power of attorney make or change my will?
    • Can trustees get help administrating trusts? 
    • Do I have to employ asset protection for all types of assets?
    • Do I need a financial power of attorney?
    • Do I need to name a trustee in my will?
    • Do we have to take account of minority shareholders’ interests and wishes in a family business?
    • Does a small business (subchapter S corporation give me the same protection as limited liability company (LLC))?
    • Does a will control all of my property?
    • Does all property have to go through probate when a person dies?
    • Does an executor (personal representative) get paid?
    • Does the person named in the will as executor (personal representative) have to serve?
    • How can a limited liability company provide me with asset protection?
    • How can an estate plan may things easier on my family after I die?
    • How can I leave specific items to particular people?
    • How can I make sure I will keep control of the family business if I get divorced?
    • How do I best protect my personal assets if I start a small business?
    • How do I get started with a succession plan?
    • How does a family wealth trust differ from a revocable living trust?
    • How does a revocable living trust avoid probate? 
    • How does trust administration differ from probate?
    • How is undue influence determined?
    • How long is a will valid?
    • How often should a succession plan be updated?
    • How often should my will be reviewed?
    • I want to start a small business with two partners. What is the best way to protect myself?
    • If I become incapacitated, will I need a durable power of attorney if I already have a living trust?
    • If I create a revocable living trusts, do I still need a will?
    • If I die owing debts, who pays my debts?
    • If I made a will, but lived in another state. Now I live in Florida. What should I do?
    • If I make a living trust, do I still need a will?
    • If there is a divorce in the family can we get shares back from an ex-spouse who is no longer a family member?
    • Is it possible that I may need more than one LLC?
    • Must I leave something to my spouse and children?
    • Should I avoid probate?
    • What are the benefits of a succession plan?
    • What are the signs of undue influence?
    • What are the uniform fraudulent transfer act (UFTA) and the uniform fraudulent convevance act (UFCA)?
    • What are trusts?
    • What benefits does a trust offer?
    • What does a guardian do?
    • What does a proper estate plan include?
    • What does if mean to fund a trust?
    • What does testate and intestate mean?
    • What happens if I become unable to care for myself? 
    • What happens if I die without a will?
    • What happens if you do not have a will or trust? 
    • What if become disabled and am no longer able to manage my affairs?
    • What is a bypass trusts?
    • What is a domestic asset protection trust?
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    • What is a fiduciary?
    • What is a health care power of attorney?
    • What is a health care proxy?
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    • What is a pour-over will?
    • What is a QTIP trust?
    • What is a registered agent?
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    • What is an A-B trust?
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    • What is an irrevocable trust?
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    • What is piercing the corporate veil?
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    • What is tenants by the entirety?
    • What is the difference between a will and a trust?
    • What is the difference between having a will and family wealth trust?
    • What is the difference between traditional estate planning and wealth planning?
    • What is trust administration?
    • What is wealth transfer planning?
    • What property does my will control?
    • What protection is available through a family limited partnership?
    • What will I still have control over my property if I have a living trust?
    • When does the trust administration process start?
    • When is the right time to begin estate planning for myself?
    • When is the right time to start succession planning?
    • When should an estate plan be reviewed? 
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    • Who administers trusts?
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    • Will a family wealth trust avoid income taxes?
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