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Library of Congress Control Number: 2023931207
ISBN 978-1-394-15854-6 (pbk); ISBN 978-1-394-15855-3 (ebk); ISBN 978-1-394-15856-0 (ebk)
Part 4: Life, Death, and Taxes
Part 5: Estate Planning for Family Businesses
Part 6: Crafting a Comprehensive Estate Plan
#1: $5,000 to darling daughter
#2: $7,000 each to all three
#3: $21,000 to the fairest of them all
Playing Hopscotch: Understanding Generation-Skipping Transfers
Knowing the rules for skipping generations (so you don’t break ’em)
Looking Deeper into Generation-Skipping Transfers and the GSTT
PART 6: CRAFTING A
PART 7: THE PART OF TENS
Introduction
Even if you’re not a zillionaire who owns multiple houses, a couple of boats, and some hefty bank accounts, you still have an estate. And with that estate comes the requirement to take control of what happens to all your belongings, no matter how much — or how little — you actually have. After all, you can’t take it with you!
So how do you take control of what happens to your estate? With planning! Welcome to the world of estate planning.
Estate planning applies to everyone, yet a surprising number of people either have only done a very small part of what they need to do (usually just creating a will, which very often is out of date) or perhaps have done absolutely no estate planning at all!
That’s where Estate Planning For Dummies comes in. This book is especially intended for you if you:
» Have done very little or nothing on your estate planning so far and feel so overwhelmed that you don’t know where to start
» Have done bits and pieces of your estate planning, but all those parts are disjointed, and you’re concerned that you have lots of holes in your estate planning
» Are concerned that you may have serious shortcomings or even outright mistakes in what you’ve put in your will, how your insurance policies are structured, and other aspects of your estate planning
» Have done a fair amount of work on your estate planning, but in a haphazard, undisciplined manner
» Realize that estate planning is an ongoing, lifelong proposition and you want to become more disciplined in how you approach your will, estate tax planning, and all the rest
In short, Estate Planning For Dummies can help you no matter where you are in the estate-planning process.
About This Book
Estate Planning For Dummies is written in easily understood language from cover to cover, with liberal use of examples. Some of the topics we cover are very basic — the estate-planning fundamentals we cover in Chapter 1, for example — while other material, such as the chapters on trusts, is more advanced and complicated.
If you’re considering estate planning for the first time, you may want to skim through the book cover to cover just to get an idea of what’s here, and then settle down and use the book as a reference on specific topics as they come up. If you’ve had a bit more exposure to estate planning, you may want to selectively read certain chapters, and either skip or skim others. We recommend at least skimming every chapter, even if you currently have (for example) a will, a few trusts, and various types of insurance policies, and understand the basics pretty well.
Foolish Assumptions
The most important assumption we’ve made about you is that you’re ready to dive into estate planning or at least are curious about what estate planning involves. Maybe you already have a basic will, but time has passed since you prepared that will and your life has become more prosperous — and complicated — and you need to look into trusts, will substitutes, estate tax considerations, and many other topics that make up your estate.
Perhaps you used an online will preparation website or even created a simple trust using a website that helps customize a trust to your particular needs. Congratulations — that’s a great start! But as you’ll see in this book, estate planning is about much more than simple wills and trusts. Modern family situations can get very complicated, and your wishes for your estate could be equally complicated . . . or maybe even convoluted. Fear not! No matter what your particular estate situation happens to be, just follow along, and we’ll walk you through both simple and complex decisions and steps that you need to make.
Icons Used in This Book
As with all For Dummies books, icons in the margins call your attention to various points we make (or try to make!) about estate planning.
When you see the Tip icon, the accompanying material is some action you should consider taking to make your life easier.
The Warning icon is exactly that: a warning of some dire consequence that may occur should you make the wrong move with your estate planning.
When you see the Technical Stuff icon, the accompanying material falls into that category of “Thanks, but that’s more than I really needed to know.” You can certainly get the gist of any chapter’s contents by skipping all the Technical Stuff material, but if you want to get “under the hood” for that chapter’s topic, a few moments spent with this technical stuff can help you thoroughly understand that topic — just like the estate-planning professionals!
The Remember icon highlights the key point or two that can help you be a better estate planner.
Beyond the Book
In addition to what you’re reading right now, this product also comes with a free access-anywhere Cheat Sheet. There you can find quick reference material about wills, trusts, and other important estate-planning topics. To get this helpful content, simply go to www.dummies.com and type Estate Planning For Dummies Cheat Sheet in the Search box.
Where to Go from Here
Now it’s time to dive into the world of estate planning. If you’re totally new to the subject, you won’t want to skip the chapters in Part 1 because they provide the foundation for the rest of the book. If you’ve already started your estate planning with a basic will and maybe a simple trust, we still recommend that you at least skim Part 1 to get a sense of how to get beyond all the hype, buzzwords, and generalities related to estate planning.
From there, you can read the book sequentially from front to back, or jump around as needed, using the table of contents and index as your guide. Whatever works best for you is how you should proceed.
1 Getting Started with Estate Planning
IN THIS PART . . .
Get the straight scoop on all your estate-planning needs.
Tally up everything that needs to figure into your estate plan.
IN THIS CHAPTER
» Understanding what your estate is
» Planning what will happen to your estate
» Realizing that your estate-planning goals are different from other people’s
» Comprehending estate-planning lingo
» Stepping onto the critical path for estate planning
» Putting together your estateplanning team
Chapter 1
Congratulations: You Have an Estate!
The protection and control that you need.
No, the above phrase isn’t the marketing slogan for a new deodorant. Instead, it expresses the two most important reasons for you to spend time and effort on your estate planning:
» After you die, the government will try to take the portion of your estate that the current tax law says it’s entitled to, but you have the opportunity to protect your estate by minimizing that tax bite.
» You want to have as much control as possible over how your estate is divided up. Basically, you want to decide what will happen to your estate rather than have a jumbled set of complicated laws dictate who will get what.
You may have spent time working on a financial plan throughout your life, as well as crafting your retirement plan. Your estate plan accompanies those other two plans and makes up the third leg that supports your life’s overall “financial stool.”
Without a solid estate plan, however, your “financial stool” can’t stand on just those two other legs. Even worse, even though you may not be around to witness the complications and damage, all your hard work on your financial and retirement plans could be severely compromised in the absence of a solid estate plan.
Before you can plan your estate, you need to understand what your estate really is. Many people think that for the average non-billionaire, estate planning involves only two steps:
» Preparing a will
» Trying to figure out what inheritance and estate taxes — the so-called “death taxes” — apply (and if so, then how much money will go to the state and federal governments)
But even though wills and death taxes are certainly important considerations, chances are, your own estate planning will involve much, much more.
This chapter presents the basics of estate planning that you need to get started on. In this chapter, we show you why estate planning is every bit as important as saving for your child’s college education or putting money away for your retirement. In fact, your estate plan is the continuation and culmination of your personal and family financial planning.
What Is an Estate?
In the most casual sense, your estate is your stuff (all your possessions). However, even if your only familiarity with estate planning comes from watching a movie or TV show where someone’s will is read, you no doubt realize that you aren’t very likely to hear words like “I leave all of my stuff to. . . .” Therefore, a bit more detail and formality is in order, which we provide in this section.
The basics: Definitions and terminology
“All my property.”
Think of that phrase when you plan your estate.
What’s that, you say? You live in an apartment and don’t own a house or a condo or any other real estate (more formally known as real property; see the “Property types” section, later in this chapter), so you think you don’t have any property? Not so fast! In a legal sense, all kinds of items are considered your property, not just real estate, including the following:
» Cash, checking and savings accounts
» Certificates of deposit (CDs)
» Stocks, bonds, and mutual funds
» Crypto assets such as cryptocurrencies and non-fungible tokens (NFTs)
» Retirement savings in your individual retirement account (IRA), 401(k), health savings account (HSA), and other special accounts
» Household furniture (including antiques)
» Clothes
» Vehicles
» Life insurance
» Annuities
» Business interests
» Jewelry, your baseball card collection, that autographed first edition of The Catcher in the Rye, and all the rest of your collectibles
As we discuss in the “Property types” section, your estate consists of all the preceding types of items — and even more — divided into several different categories. (For estate-planning purposes, these categories are often treated differently from each other, but we cover that distinction later.)
The types of property listed almost always have a positive balance, meaning that they are worth something even if “something” is only a very small amount. Of course, an exception may be your overdrawn checking account, which then is actually property with a negative balance. So, your estate also needs to account for debts that need to be subtracted from your asset values, such as:
» The outstanding balance of the mortgage you owe on your house or a vacation home
» The outstanding balance on all loans (home equity, car, or student loans)
» The outstanding balances on your credit card accounts
» Taxes you owe to the government
» Any IOUs to people that you haven’t paid off yet
Basically, all debts you have are as much a part of your estate as all the positivebalance items.
In addition to understanding what your estate is, you also need to know what your estate is worth. You can calculate your estate’s value as follows:
1. Add up the value of all the positive-balance items in your estate (again, your banking accounts, investments, collectibles, real estate, and so on).
2. Subtract the total value of all the negative-balance items (the remaining balance of the mortgage on your home, how much you still owe on your credit cards, and so on) from the total of all the positive-balance items.
The result is the net value of your estate, which you could think of as your “personal balance sheet.” In most cases, the result is a positive number, meaning that what you have is worth more than what you owe.
If calculating a net value by subtracting the total of what you owe from the total of what you have seems familiar, you’re right! In the simplest sense, calculating the value of your estate involves essentially the same steps that you follow when you apply for many different types of loans (mortgage, automobile, educational assistance, and so on).
However, in many cases — including perhaps your own — determining what the parts of your estate are, and what they’re worth, can be a bit more complicated than simply creating two columns on a sheet of paper or in your computer’s spreadsheet program and doing basic arithmetic. If you’re a farmer, for example, you need to figure out the value of your crops or livestock. If you own a small oneperson business, you need to calculate what your business is worth. Or perhaps you and six other people are joint owners of a complicated real estate investment partnership; if so, what is your share worth?
In Chapter 2, we discuss more technical and sometimes more complicated ways to determine your estate’s value.
For now, another point to keep in mind is that, in addition to what you have right now, your estate may also include other items that you don’t have in your possession, but will at some point in the future, such as:
» Any future payments you expect to receive, such as an insurance settlement or the remaining 18 annual payments from that $35 million lottery jackpot that you won a couple of years ago!