Making it ‘Equal”

Be careful about leaving assets that come with a tax bill.

Be careful about leaving assets that come with a tax bill.

  • If you leave debt, the result can often impact your estate distribution

  • Debts can include taxes, a mortgage, credit card bills, personal loans, condo fees

  • A well written and funded trust can insure equal distribution

When you’re deciding how to divide your assets among multiple heirs, it’s very important to consider who will pay your estate’s debts out of their share. Two bequests that look equal in theory might be very different in practice once debts are taken into account.

Generally, when a person dies, his or her outstanding debts must be paid out of “probate assets.” This means the assets that pass to someone according to the person’s will. But many assets don’t pass via a will. For instance, a jointly held bank account, jointly owned real estate, an IRA, a 401(k), and a “transfer on death” brokerage account might all pass to someone outside of a will, and thus not count as probate assets.

Also, life insurance proceeds aren’t dependent on a will and aren’t considered probate assets either.

It’s usually much easier for everyone if you take debts into account in your estate planning.

That means that if you have three children, and one gets your retirement accounts, one gets your life insurance proceeds, and the third gets everything else, the third child will be saddled with paying 100% of your debts.

What’s a debt? Debts can include taxes, a mortgage, outstanding credit card bills, personal loans, condo fees, and more. Even car leases can cause problems, because some contracts treat a person’s death as an “early termination” of the lease.

Of course, your children or other heirs might be very cooperative and agree to share the burden of your debts. But it’s usually much easier for everyone if you take debts into account in your estate planning, and divide your assets accordingly.

The best way to insure that your estate is divided equally is consult with an experienced estate planning attorney, provide accurate information, have the attorney prepare and fund a trust for your family, and make sure it is maintained.

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Sean O'Bryan

Davison, Michigan estate planning attorney Sean Paul O'Bryan has been helping families for 30 years work through the complicated issues of trusts, wills, estate taxes, elder law, and probate avoidance. He is a noted author and speaker on a variety of estate topics. Sean is married and has 2 children, and lives on an active farm in Lapeer, Michigan with several horses, sheep, goats & chickens

http://www.obryanlaw.com
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