You Inherited a Retirement Account: Now What?
Fri 22 Jan, by FritzLaw on Estate Planning, Probate
For decades, common financial planning wisdom has encouraged almost all American workers to maximize their contributions to qualified retirement accounts. Indeed, doing so can be a powerful way to reduce your current income tax liability, grow your savings exponentially tax-free, and, in most states, protect your savings from claims of creditors. And by and large, this is what most American workers have done. The result is that Americans have gradually amassed huge amounts of wealth …
What Happens When Your Disabled Child Turns 18 and What You Need to Do Beforehand
Thu 21 Jan, by FritzLaw on Estate Planning, Probate
When your child is under the age of 18, you, as their parent, can make most, if not all decisions, on their behalf. However, when your child turns 18, the law views them as an adult, and you no longer have the ability to control what and how decisions are made, or even receive relevant information about those decisions. For most parents, this is a rite of passage. They just have to sit back and …
Nosy Neighbor Nellie Can Find Out About Your Probate. Really.
Wed 13 Jan, by FritzLaw on Estate Planning, Probate
Most people think of probate (the process of collecting, managing, and distributing a deceased person’s money and property) as a private process. However, because wills are filed at the courthouse, probated estates become a matter of public record. That means your nosy neighbor Nellie can simply go down to the courthouse or hop online and find out about your probate. Really. It’s Not Just Nellie That Has Access… After a death, most states require that …
Is Your Estate Plan Incapacity Proof?
Fri 8 Jan, by FritzLaw on Estate Planning, Probate
For most people, it is perfectly natural to think about estate planning only in terms of planning for death. While planning for your death is very important, if that is all you plan for, your planning can quickly become woefully inadequate. As medical knowledge and technology have improved over the decades, so too has modern medicine’s ability to keep people alive for much longer. It is no accident that in many areas of the country, …
Estate Planning After Personal Injury Settlements
Tue 8 Dec, by FritzLaw on Estate Planning, Personal Injury, Probate
In the hectic and sometimes dangerous world that we live in, it is an unfortunate fact of life that accidents happen and people get hurt. The U.S. legal system is designed so that those who suffer injury through the avoidable fault of others can seek compensation for those injuries. Sometimes injuries are so severe that the injured individual receives a significant sum of cash through a settlement or court judgement. Such a sudden and large …