Do you know beyond a shadow of a doubt what would happen legally and financially to you, your loved ones, your money, and everything else you care about if something unexpected happened to you?
Do you know beyond a shadow of a doubt what would happen Legally and financially to you, your loved ones, your money, and everything else you care about if something unexpected happened to you?
WHY IS ESTATE PLANNING IMPORTANT?
Will, Trust or ... ?
What do you really need to keep your family out of court and out of conflict when something happens to you? We'll cover the three biggest fears most people have when it comes to estate planning.
Don't Fail Your Loved Ones
Even if you've created a plan, it may not work when your family needs it. See exactly why most plans fail and how you can put in place a plan for peace. Your family deserves it.
What It Costs to Do It Right
Most people wonder what estate planning should cost and whether they even need an estate plan. We'll guide you to know what the right plan should cost, and also describe our estate planning process so you know your options.
Welcome to Our "Estate Planning For Busy People" Process
No matter how busy you are, how complex your situation (or simple it may be), we make it as easy and affordable as possible for you to get the right plan, at the right price, and ensure that plan stays up to date so it works when the people you love need it.
1. Life & Legacy Planning Session
We begin with a Life & Legacy Planning Session so we can get a full understanding of who you are, what you own, and what matters to you. Whether we work together ongoing or not, you will leave the meeting more financially organized than ever before with a map you can leave for the people you love to find what you have in case of an emergency. During this Session, we’ll review the state’s default estate plan for you, and if you prefer a different plan, we’ll help you choose the right plan for you, at the right price, based on the specifics of your unique situation.
2. Review and Finalize Your Decisions + Inventory Your Assets
After your Planning Session, we will send you a list of all of the choices you made so you can reconsider your decisions and ensure you’ve made the most ideal choices for yourself and the people you love. This includes a list of your key people named as guardians, executors, powers of attorney, and trustees, along with other important decisions we will have discussed together. You’ll feel confident that you understand your choices, and that you are prepared to discuss them with the people in your life so they aren’t surprised, if and when something happens to you.
We will also send you an inventory of your assets, which is the key component of ensuring you don’t leave your family with a big mess. The inventory we’ll prepare for you is comprehensive, and designed to be kept up to date throughout your lifetime. And, yes, we can ensure that happens. If you become incapacitated or in the event of your death, this inventory will be one of the most important pieces of your plan. You’ve worked so hard to create what you have, let’s not let any of it get lost.
3. Sign Your Personalized Estate Plan
During your signing “ceremony” (yes it is quite official-feeling!), we will review your legal documents as well as a diagram of your plan, and cover all the legal language specific to your family and decisions. If we meet in-office, we will arrange the notary and witnesses for you. If we meet virtually, we will print and mail your full estate plan to you for signing and easy return back to us so that we can process everything.
4. Deliver Your Plan
Once your plan is signed, that’s usually the end of the estate planning journey – but not with us. That’s when we are just getting started with our support.
We’ll deliver your plan along with the most important part of the planning process – a Life & Legacy Recording created with you to ensure you are leaving behind far more than just your money. The very thing your loved ones want most – your stories, insights, values and experience – are captured as part of your Life & Legacy Plan.
We make sure your assets are all titled in the right way for maximum protection in alignment with your goals.
If you have minor children at home, we deliver the part of your planning that ensures they are always cared for by the people you want, in the way you want – and never taken into the care of strangers, no matter what.
And, we make sure the people you’ve named in your plan know just what to do, if something happens to you.
Finally, we make sure your plan works to keep the people you love out of court, and out of conflict, with a review of your plan at least every 3 years, and possibly even more frequently, depending on how much ongoing support you desire.
Frequently Asked Questions About Estate Planning
Your Last Will is a legal document through which you indicate how you want assets owned in your name to be distributed, at the time of your death. This is also the document in which you name a legal representative – sometimes called a personal representative or executor – to carry out the distribution of your assets, distribute any assets owned in your name, at the time of your death. At the time of your death, your Last Will is filed with the probate court, to administer your estate. If you want to avoid the court process, you can use various methods to keep your loved ones out of court, which we will share with you in a Life & Legacy Planning® Session.
You only need to work with an attorney if you want to ensure you do not leave a mess for the people you love. These days, there are many DIY estate planning options, or even options in which you can work with a financial advisor or CPA on your estate planning. However, the risk of doing so is that your family could be left with a set of well-meaning, yet insufficient documents that fail in the event of your incapacity or death, leaving them in court or conflict, even if you thought you had a simple situation.
We share frequently about celebrities and people with extreme wealth who make the error of trying to go it alone or not using the right kind of professional, so if you thought you could do your own estate planning or work with a non-legal professional on a will or a trust, it’s certainly not your fault. But, now that you are here, let us save your family from the nightmare of what can happen when you don’t truly understand the consequences of working with the wrong kind of professional, or trying to go it alone.
If you truly cannot afford to work with an attorney – and you’ve engaged in a full cost-benefit analysis, like the kind we support you to conduct during our Life & Legacy Planning Session by considering your unique family dynamics and assets, and the right plan for you at your budget – we do have a training on the steps to DIY your estate plan, which we would be happy to send you upon request of our office.
How much does a “will” or “trust” cost is the question we get asked most often, and that makes sense – we know the topic of the price of a will or trust, or estate planning as a whole, is a critical part of your shopping around for an estate plan process. That’s exactly why we have designed our fees on a “flat-fee, no surprises basis”, and why our Life & Legacy Planning process is specifically designed to help you choose the right fee for you and the people you love based on your unique circumstances.
While we cannot quote fees online or over the phone because we need to understand the specifics of your unique situation, our unique estate planning process – Life & Legacy Planning (or estate planning for busy people) – is designed to guide you to choose your own fee, based on your family dynamics, your unique assets and your desires. Yes, you read that right, you’ll choose your own fee, so you know you’re paying exactly what’s right for you.
Having said that, you may want to read our report on the 5 Ways a $1500 or Less Estate Plan Could Fail Your Family.
A Trust is an agreement between a Grantor (the person who puts assets in the trust) and a Trustee (the person or entity that holds title to those assets) to hold assets for the benefit of a Beneficiary (the person who will receive the benefit of the assets while they are held in the trust). When using a Trust to hold title to assets, those assets will not be subject to a court process in the event of the incapacity or death of the Grantor. With a standard “Revocable Living Trust” or “Living Trust”, you would be the Grantor, the Trustee AND the Beneficiary of the Trust during your lifetime, and then upon your incapacity or death, a Successor Trustee can seamlessly step in, take over, and ensure the assets you’ve put in the Trust are distributed to your named Beneficiaries (or continue to be held in trust for their benefit).
Trusts can also be irrevocable, for asset protection purposes, for estate tax purposes, or for other purposes, which are beyond the scope of this discussion. If you are considering an irrevocable trust, there are tax and other considerations that you must take into account, ideally with the guidance of a trusted lawyer who can counsel you through all of the decisions
No, and it’s really the exact opposite because if you are not rich, the cost of failed or non-existent estate planning could be extremely costly for the people you love. As an adult, you have an estate. And, if you do not plan for your estate in the event of your incapacity or death, you’re leaving the people you love with a big job to handle, and they may not have the time, experience or money to do it. Failed estate planning is part of what causes families to lose wealth from one generation to the next, instead of grow their generational wealth. If you want to create generational wealth for your future generations, plan now.
Your estate plan works no matter where in the U.S. you might physically be (such as on vacation) or might move to. This said, we always recommend finding your neighborhood Personal Family Lawyer® to review your out-of-state plan to help you ensure you make any necessary updates based on differences in state law.
No, a Last Will is limited in how it can protect your children. First, a Last Will is effective only once you pass away and once the document is filed with and accepted by the probate court, but you may have a need long before the moment you pass away to have a guardian for your children. Second, appointing who would raise your children is one thing, while appointing short-term temporary guardians in case of a short-lived emergency is another thing. Your Kids Protection Plan® will leave no stone uncovered or contingency unplanned for. You name both short-term and long-term guardians and ensure that everyone you trust has exactly the information they need on-hand at any moment to care for your children.
In the world of kids protection planning, the best outcome for you and your children will be achieved only by working with a lawyer who encounters kids protection planning situations daily. You are here in this world to raise your children the best way you know how, but unfortunately, some families collapse after the death of a parent because they either did no planning at all, or if they did, it was through an online platform that knew nothing about the most comprehensive way to protect children. We encourage a lifelong relationship between you and your estate planning attorney so that you have a lawyer for life to be there for your children when you cannot be.
Think of a Kids Protection Plan as one piece (a very important piece) of your overall estate plan, and an estate plan is not simply a Last Will, as many believe. For parents with minor children, you need both the traditional estate plan that every adult needs as well as a Kids Protection Plan that every parent of minor children needs.
Only certain types of assets are appropriate for an asset protection trust. Once you identify what those are in your case, you can transfer those valuable assets into an asset protection trust to protect those assets from future and unknown creditors. This transfer will protect your assets while you are living and will also protect them from the IRS when you die.
This said, there are some disadvantages associated with transfers of valuable property into asset protection trusts, which include your likely or known exposure to creditors’ claims, your personal loss of control over how a particular asset is managed once transferred, and potential gift tax consequences that result from the transfer. What assets should be transferred into asset protection trusts depends on your specific situation, including your state of residence, the state where your business has been organized, where your physical office and registered agent are located, where your assets are located, and more.
Even then, certain assets are considered “exempt” (forever protected) from creditors, and each state determines what it considers exempt assets. In some states, exempt assets include clothing, jewelry, tools, and household furnishings, while in other states additional assets such as life insurance and social security benefits are exempt.
If you have a retirement plan, federal law does not allow creditors to reach that asset. This applies to profit sharing, pensions, and 401(k) plans. However, both traditional and Roth IRAs may not be protected depending on the situation. We work closely with you so that you know the exact situation in your case and can make the right decisions from an asset protection planning perspective.
Yes, asset protection planning works when done right. Asset protection is based on the foundational principles that virtually any and every asset you own can be seized from you by a creditor, and any asset you do not own cannot be seized from you by a creditor. In a nutshell, asset protection aims to remove you from the reality where your ownership of an asset is basically the same as your control over an asset. Instead, with asset protection planning, we help you legitimately remove yourself from legal ownership over an asset where you maintain control of your assets, which allows you to continue enjoying the economic benefits of your assets while protecting those from creditors. This said, we do not prepare plans where the goal is to evade a known or likely creditor, as at that point, this type of planning is too late.
About Valeria Lewis
Valeria Lewis is thrilled to help people use the estate planning process to pass on a legacy of love and care to their loved ones. She recognizes that family wealth is not just money, but also the values and experiences that enrich future generations. She is the best fit for people who do not just want to leave their family a set of documents that may or may not work, but instead plans that will keep their families out of court and out of conflict. Her practice has systems in place to encourage regular communication so clients’ plans stay up to date..
I have nothing but the best to say about the estate planning services I received from Lewis & Guerrero. Mrs Lewis always took the time to listen to my concerns. She is extremely knowledgeable, courteous, and family oriented. I am confident that my estate planning needs will be met. It has been a great experience working with her!!!
– DB D
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