Estate Planning Attorneys East Glastonbury : Probate & Elder Law Attorneys in East Glastonbury, CT

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Estate Planning, Probate & Elder Law East Glastonbury, Connecticut

East Glastonbury Estate Planning & Probate Attorneys

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Nirenstein, Horowitz & Assoc.

TEL (860) 548-1000 |  Hartford, CT

TEL 203-221-2600 |  Westport, CT

Barry D. Horowitz is a founding partner in the law firm of Nirenstein, Horowitz & Associates, P.C. He received his diploma from the Loomis Chaffee School and his Bachelor of Arts from B...(more)



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ESTATE PLANNING, PROBATE & ELDER LAW NEWS

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Leave A Legacy of the Mid-Willamette Valley will present a forum called "Estate Planning for Everyone" at 5:30 p.m. May 6 at Willamette University College of Law, 245 Winter St. via Statesman Journal

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» Wills with Testamentary Trusts

I usually talk about estate planning in terms of two different approaches:

Simple: having a simple Will, where you give away all of your property outright

vs.

More involved: having what's known as a pourover Will and a separate living trust. You give your property away in your living trust -- you leave it to a trustee, who holds it for one or more beneficiaries

But there's also a middle way, which involves having only a Will, but incorporating trusts into that Will. This is known as having a Will with a testamentary trust. What's the drawback to this approach, and why isn't it more popular?

Well, when I talk about the advantages of a living trust, I address 5 of them in particular:

1. Probate avoidance
2. Control
3. Creditor protection for beneficiaries
4. Privacy
5. Estate tax minimization

If you create trusts under your Will rather in a separate document, those trusts can't be funded during your life (since your Will has no effect until death). As a result, you will need a probate. Your beneficiaries also don't get privacy, since the trust information is all located in your Will, which is a public document. But the other three advantages still exist.

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