Estate Planning Attorneys Amoret : Probate & Elder Law Attorneys in Amoret, MO

Estate Planning, Probate & Elder Law Attorneys

 

Estate Planning, Probate & Elder Law Amoret, Missouri

Amoret Estate Planning & Probate Attorneys

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Reaves Law Firm, P.C.

TEL (816) 756-2100 |  Kansas City, MO

Craig C. Reaves has been licensed as an attorney since 1978. The major emphasis of his law practice is in the areas of Estate Planning, Elder Law, Special Needs Trusts and plann...(more)

Parman & Easterday, LLP

TEL (405) 843-6100 |  Oklahoma City, OK

TEL (913) 385-9400 |  Overland Park, KS

TEL (918) 877-2676 |  Tulsa, OK

After helping his own family deal with a lengthy probate and the IRS following his father’s untimely death in a farm accident, Larry made a decision to help families create effective estate ...(more)



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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.