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Trusts are not just for the rich. Middle and even low income earners
can benefit from choosing a trust over a traditional will. Don't
let the common misconceptions about trusts keep you from considering
the benefits and security a trust might afford you and your family.
Trusts
may have been for the Rockfellers, but not anymore. The middle class
is increasingly trying on trusts and finding that they fit -- and
even look better than the traditional will. So, what are these benefits?
The
first benefit: avoiding
probate. Probate can be expensive, time-consuming,
and a burden on those left behind. The middle class and even low
income earners are discovering that their family will benefit from
a living trust (a trust set up while you're still alive). By providing
a living trust, you can avoid the courts and probate fees.
Incapacity
protection . The second and possibly most compelling
benefit of a trust is what happens if you become incapacitated.
Wills require death, but we don't always make a sudden exit from
this life. More and more people enter into a state of incapacity
during their lifetimes. Protecting your assets during this time
is accomplished either with a guardianship (another expensive and
emotionally draining legal process) or by your trust. Your trust
can allow for your assets to be controlled in the manner set out
by you in the event of incapacity. There are no courts to decide
what to do or lawyers appointed to administer your assets. Instead,
your wishes are met by a trust.
Privacy
is a third benefit of not going to probate. Probate courts are like
other courts: open to the public. Trusts are private.
A
fourth benefit is protection.
A trust can protect your plans from immature, disgruntled heirs,
in-laws, ex-wives: all the drama that can come to even the best
families when money is involved. Wills, in short, can be contested.
This process is emotionally taxing, expensive, and the outcome is
unclear. Your "will" could be reversed or changed during
this process. Trusts afford more protection from these eventualities
and are harder to sucessfully contest.
Fifthly
and traditionally, trusts are a way of minimizing
taxes (in a will, too). Though this used to be the activity
of the rich, the increasing tax burden on the middle class has changed
things. Now, the middle class needs tax relief and they are turning
to trusts to get it.
Robert Focke and Associates offers
free initial consultation on estate planning, so that you
can understand your options. Please contact our offices at
713.850.7799.
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