Uniform Transfer to Minors Act accounts allow a person to leave funds to a minor beneficiary without a court’s interference. In general, minors are not legally able to own property. If a minor comes into possession of a bank or investment account or proceeds from a life insurance policy or retirement plan, a court may have to appoint a guardian over the property. UTMA accounts sidestep this requirement by naming a custodian over the funds: the custodian oversees and invests the funds until the minor turns 21 years old. However, just because UTMAs avoid court oversight, does not mean they are devoid of other problems: Poor Investment Decisions: A custodian who invests the funds poorly relies on state
Category: Blog Post
5 Special Provisions You Should Add to Your Will
At some level, American Wills have not changed much in the last 200 years: Just like in old-timey England you need to (1) state who gets what, particularly anything left-over (your residuary estate), (2) who shall manage your estate’s affairs (your Executor), (3) you need to sign your Will or have someone do it for you in your presence with your permission if you don’t do so yourself, and (4) you need two disinterested witnesses who sign your Will in your presence as you state it is your Will. However, there are a few modern developments and government programs that justify adding the following provisions to even the most routine Wills: Contingent Ownership of a 529 Plan: If you
Medicaid Pitfalls: Cash Value Life Insurance
Qualifying for Medicaid can be a pain in the neck: You can only qualify for benefits if you have a limited amount of assets and income. Yes, there are some exceptions, but in most cases there are financial limits. Unfortunately, people’s past investment decisions may severely impact their current eligibility. One of the worst former financial decisions for Medicaid planning is the limits placed on cash value life insurance. “Permanent” life insurance is meant to last until you reach age 95 or 100, then pay out to you or your beneficiary even if you are still alive. These policies allow you to invest extra money to the policy’s “cash value” so that as the annual cost of the insurance
Naming Beneficiaries: When to Start (and Stop) Asking “What If?”
My mentor was a meticulous, forward-thinking attorney. When she retired from private practice I succeeded her and took over her client files. As a result, I had the pleasure of reading many of the wills she had drafted (not a recommended activity for narcoleptics who don’t want to fall asleep). She was absolutely scrupulous when it came to naming contingent beneficiaries to an estate. For some of her clients, and indeed for me too at times, it seemed like a maddening process. Here is a common scenario: I imagine going to an attorney to draft my Will, create beneficiary designation forms, and consider creating a trust. Now comes the moment of truth: When I pass away, who gets what?
IRAs v. Roths? Choose the “Absolute Benefit”
No one knows their financial future with certainty, but when given the choice, I almost always suggest taking a sure thing now (an “Absolute Benefit”) over risking an uncertain future (an “Uncertain Benefit”). In this regard, I tell all of my clients to take a tax deduction now and invest in a tax deductible IRA or 401(k) instead of contributing to a Roth IRA or Roth 401(k) plan, in order to optimize the certainty of income tax savings. Remember that you take an immediate income tax deduction on a 401(k) or most traditional IRA contributions; you only pay taxes when you withdraw funds (usually after you are retired, and your tax bracket is lower). In contrast, Roth accounts require
When Should I Use or Avoid A Joint Trust?
A joint trust is a trust created during your lifetime, where both you and at least one other individual are the Grantors (creators). These are almost always “inter vivos” (created during your life, and not by a will upon your passing), and tend to be done by happily married spouses. While they tend to simplify most people’s estate plans by only having to deal with one document, joint trusts also have a time and a place when they should be avoided. The most ideal time to utilize joint trusts is when the creators of the trust are (1) married, (2) want the same end-result for the funds, and (3) trust the surviving creator to control the funds when he/she
How a Grandparent Should Gift Money to a New York 529 Plan
Funding a grandchild’s college education can be a beast: The amount of money that may have paid for your child’s four year undergraduate education may only pay for one year’s worth of tuition for your grandchild. This coupled with increasing housing costs and other relentless modern-day living expenses, make it hard for your children to adequately fund a 529 Plan to pay for your grandchildren’s college education. Here are a few ownership and funding choices a grandparent may want to consider when funding a 529 Plan for a grandchild: Open a 529 Plan as the Owner: Funding a 529 Plan is unlike most gifts. For most transfers, once you make a gift you have no way to get
Disinheriting Someone? Don’t Use a “Pour-Over” Will
You have a right to leave money to who you want to and, when you have a will, can leave it to those you want: It is not uncommon to disinherit a family member who would otherwise receive an inheritance if no Will existed. However, your nearest family members (some of whom you may have disinherited) are required to receive a copy of the Will when you die. Clearly you do not want these disinherited people giving your choice of beneficiaries a hard time. Many people rightly resort to disinheriting an heir by bequeathing money using a Trust which has no requirement of placing such family members on legal notice. However, there is one regularly-used shortcut that can defeat your
Minimizing Capital Gains Taxes: Being Conscious of Cost Basis
Of all the taxes that get reported by the press, capital gains taxes get the least exposure despite the significant impact they have on Americans. Yes, income taxes affect everyone who has ever received a paycheck, and estate taxes are in the news all the time (even though less than 6,000 estates owed federal estate taxes in 2015). But it is capital gains taxes which are so often paid when they could have been avoided, capital gains taxes which get paid no matter what your income is, and capital gains taxes which may substitute estate taxes as government’s significant source of revenue if the estate tax is repealed by the in-coming Trump Administration and Republican Congress – and they will
Why Trusts are Still Relevant in a Post-Estate Tax World
The Trump Administration is about to join forces with a Republican Legislature, meaning there is a huge chance that the federal gift and estate taxes could be repealed. I have heard many of my colleague bemoan the fact that their bread-and—butter (complex estate tax-saving trusts) will become irrelevant, their careers are over, and how they wish they went into Medical School or they are moving to Canada in January or something else equally insane. While trusts have been useful devices to preserve a spouse’s estate tax exemption for Credit Shelter Trust purposes, this has by no means ever been their only purpose. Indeed, plenty of people already have trusts for a multitude of other purposes that shall continue to