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Elizabeth A. Perry’s
ESTATE PLANNING CHECKLIST
Click
HERE
to download a PDF Version
Documents you need to fill out
before your first appointment:
Estate
Planning Questionnaire
How do you know when it is time to review
your estate planning?
Here is a list of questions that will help you decide.
A. Have there been changes in your
family?
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Do you have grandchildren you wish to include in
your estate planning? |
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Have your children’s circumstances changed (e.g.
Are you concerned about their receiving an inheritance and having it
impacted by a divorce, creditors, etc.)? |
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Are there new people in your life that should be
named in your will (e.g. birth, adoption)? |
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Are you planning on getting married and need a
prenuptial agreement? |
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Have you gotten married since you signed your old
will? (This is an exceptionally important time to sign a new will even
if you make no changes since the new marriage impacts the old will.) |
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Have you moved to a new state? |
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Has someone you named as a beneficiary in your will
passed away or become disabled? |
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Do you have a new charity you would like to
remember? |
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Are your personal representative, attorney-in-fact
for finances, attorney-in-fact for health care, guardian, and/or trustee
still the right fiduciaries for you? |
B. Have there been changes in your assets?
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Has the value of your estate substantially
increased or decreased? |
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Have you acquired real estate outside of
Washington? |
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Have you reviewed how your IRA/401K beneficiary
designations fit with your will/trust? |
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Do you need help thinking through how the
beneficiary designations on your life insurance, investment accounts,
and/or bank accounts fit with your will/trust? |
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Would a Revocable Living Trust better serve your
goals? |
C. Do you need to plan
for incapacity?
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Has there been a change in your or your spouse’s
health? |
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Have you been denied long term care insurance and
are you concerned about long term care costs? |
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Should you include authority for gifting in your
durable power of attorney? Do your goals and family situation make this
a good idea? |
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Does your health care directive clearly state your
desires about the medical treatment you want if you can not speak for
yourself? |
D. Do changes in the law dictate
changes in your estate planning?
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Community Property.
If you are married and new to Washington, it is
very important to review the new options you have in your estate
planning documents now that you are in a community property state. This
is true even if you have moved from another community property state
since each state’s community property law are distinct. |
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Law Changes. |
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A recent change in federal law – the Health
Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 or HIPAA - has made
it advisable to revise health care powers of attorney to comply with
federal law. |
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The estate tax law is always changing and should be
periodically reviewed if your asset level puts you at risk. |
E. Passage of
Time.
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Although you probably do not need to have an attorney review your
documents every three to five years, you yourself should read your
documents periodically. (Doing so has the added benefit of being an
insomnia aid.) Read your documents with this list in hand to see if any
issues are triggered. If so, it’s time to schedule a review
appointment. |
The life-time
exemption from estate tax is scheduled to change as follows:
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Year |
Federal Exemption Amount |
Washington Exemption Amount |
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2006-08 |
$2,000,000 |
$2,000,000 |
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2009 |
$3,500,000 |
$2,000,000 |
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2010 |
Repeal of estate tax (maybe) |
$2,000,000 |
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2011 |
$1,000,000 |
$2,000,000 |
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