• Follow
  • Follow
  • Follow


9990 Coconut Road, Suite 342, Bonita Springs, FL 34135



(239) 498-6999

  • Home
  • Attorney Profile
  • Practice Areas
    • Estate & Trust Planning
    • Probate, Estate & Trust Administration
    • Asset / Creditor Protection Planning
    • Business Planning
    • Wealth Transfer Planning
  • Testimonials
  • About Us
  • Resources
    • Blog
    • Events
    • Newsletters
    • Video FAQS
  • Contact Us
Casey Law Group
  • Home
  • Attorney Profile
  • Practice Areas
    • Estate & Trust Planning
    • Probate, Estate & Trust Administration
    • Asset / Creditor Protection Planning
    • Business Planning
    • Wealth Transfer Planning
  • Testimonials
  • About Us
  • Resources
    • Blog
    • Events
    • Newsletters
    • Video FAQS
  • Contact Us

Two Essential Things to Add to Your Moving Checklist

The month of May means not only the end of the school year and the beginning of summer but also the beginning of the busiest moving season of the year. That’s why May is National Moving Month. There is a lot to think about when moving: along with organizing and packing up all of your belongings, there is also starting and stopping utilities, mail forwarding, updating voter registration, and so on. While the ever-growing number of items on your moving to-do list may be overwhelming, it is important not to overlook two essential items that should be added to your moving checklist: (1) locating your important documents and (2) meeting with your advisor team.
 
Locating Your Important Documents

 
In all of the chaos of moving boxes and packing tape, it is easy for things to get lost in the shuffle or even thrown out during a move. Yet certain important documents, such as birth certificates, social security cards, passports, financial statements and estate planning documents, should not be packed up and put on the moving truck along with your dishes and shoes. Keep these important documents safe and accessible during your move and ensure that they do not get thrown out by accident.
 
One idea is to purchase a portable file box with an attached lid and a secure latch. You might consider purchasing a brightly colored one so that it is easily identifiable. Then, place this file box in a secure and easily accessible location. If you are moving locally, a logical place might be at a family member’s or friend’s home. If you are moving a longer distance, that place might be the trunk of your car.
 
It is also wise to have electronic backup copies of all of your important documents. This could take the form of taking pictures of your documents and saving them to your smartphone, a password-protected removable flash or external hard drive, or storing them in the cloud. Then you will at least have a copy of these important documents in case you cannot locate the original.
 
By adding this simple step to your moving checklist, you will save yourself a lot of time and headache when, for example, you are not having to run around searching through unpacked boxes for your children’s birth certificates so that you can register them for their new school.
 
Meeting with Your Advisor Team
 
Along with contacting the moving company, it is also a good idea to reach out to your team of advisors during a move. For example, one of the pressing questions associated with a move is how much it will cost. Although the final calculation of cost will depend on factors such as the size of your home, the distance you are moving, and your willingness to take on DIY projects, your financial advisor can help you set a moving budget that aligns with your long-term financial goals.
 
If you are moving to a new state, it is also advisable to contact your estate planning attorney. In general, a will or trust created in one state should be valid in your new home state. However, some documents, such as a financial or medical power of attorney, can be state-specific. Because estate planning laws vary by state, it is highly recommended that you have your estate planning documents reviewed to ensure their validity in your new state. Your attorney can review your documents or connect you with an attorney in your new state who can review them for you.
 
If you are married, your out-of-state move may have additional estate planning implications if you are moving to or from a community property state. Currently, there are nine community property states: Arizona, California, Idaho, Louisiana, Nevada, New Mexico, Texas, Washington, and Wisconsin. In these states, there is a presumption that property acquired during the marriage is owned equally. On the other hand, property acquired by gift or inheritance or that is brought into the marriage by one spouse is separate property. Moving from a community property state to a noncommunity property state (i.e., a common law state) or from a common law state to a community property state raises questions about whether community property remains or becomes community property. For example, if a couple acquires a home in California during their marriage and then moves to Nebraska and purchases a new home in Nebraska with the proceeds from the sale of their home in California, is the new Nebraska home community property? Your estate planning attorney can help answer these questions for you and advise you about the steps you should take to preserve certain tax benefits that may be available to you.
 
There is a lot to think about when moving, but locating and safekeeping your important documents and meeting with your adviser team are two essential items that should be added to that moving checklist. If you are moving soon, please reach out to us so that we can help ensure your move goes smoothly.

Newsletter Archive


View All Newsletters
  • Advisor Focused Newsletter 50
  • Client Focused Newsletter 51

Services:

Estate & Trust Planning
Probate, Estate & Trust Administration
Asset/Creditor Protection Planning
Business Planning
Wealth Transfer Planning

Disclaimers:

Terms & Conditions
Privacy Policy

Follow Us:

  • Follow
  • Follow
  • Follow

Disclaimers:

Terms & Conditions
Privacy Policy

Services:

Estate & Trust Planning
Probate, Estate & Trust Administration
Asset/Creditor Protection Planning
Business Planning
Wealth Transfer Planning

Follow Us:

  • Follow
  • Follow
  • Follow
2020 Copyright Casey Law Group P.L. A Website Design by Ahrens Technologies | Kirkland’s Webdesgin.
Accessibility by WAH
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Asset and Creditor Protection Planning
  • Asset Protection Law
  • Attorney Profile
  • Blog
  • Business
  • Business Formation Law
  • Business Owner Planning
  • Business Planning
  • Contact Us
  • Contact Us
  • Estate & Trust Planning
  • Estate Planning Law
  • Events
  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Probate, Estate & Trust Administration
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Testimonials
  • Testing Video
  • Trust Administration
  • Video FAQs
  • Video Links
    • 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?
    • What is a durable power of attorney?
    • What is a family wealth trust?
    • What is a fiduciary?
    • What is a health care power of attorney?
    • What is a health care proxy?
    • What is a living will?
    • What is a pour-over will?
    • What is a QTIP trust?
    • What is a registered agent?
    • What is a revocable trust?
    • What is a testamentary trust?
    • What is a testator and a testarix?
    • What is a trustee?
    • What is an A-B trust?
    • What is an executor (personal representative) and what does the executor do?
    • What is an irrevocable trust?
    • What is asset protection?
    • What is codicil?
    • What is estate planning?
    • What is incapacity or a lack of capacity?
    • What is included in my estate?
    • What is offshore planning?
    • What is personal residence trust?
    • What is piercing the corporate veil?
    • What is probate?
    • 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? 
    • When should I review my existing will?
    • When should I start asset protection?
    • Who administers trusts?
    • Why do I have to be careful about fraudulent transfer rules?
    • Why should I make a living trust?
    • Will a family wealth trust avoid income taxes?
    • Would a living trust provide protection for my assets if I were sued?
  • Wealth Transfer Planning
  • Wealth Transfer Planning
  • Will and Trusts Law