Estate Planning Strategies

We can help.

BKM Wealth Management's Financial Advisors can work with your attorney and accountantant to ensure that your heirs' risks are managed and that your assets transition as efficiently and smoothly as possible.

Estate planning is for everyone.

You might associate estate planning with famous people you see in the news. In fact, estate planning could be appropriate for everyone.

Consider your assets: bank accounts, investment accounts, 401(k) or 403(b) plan accounts, house, cars, jewelry, and heirlooms. This is your estate and your estate plan can define what you would like to happen to these assets when you die.

An estate plan can also take care of you as you get older or if you become ill or incapacitated. Being wealthy has little to do with it.

If you don't make your own plan, your family may be left scrambling at an already difficult time. Bottom line: If you don't decide, someone will decide for you.

Five essential documents

These five documents are often essential to an estate plan:

  • Will – Instructions for distributing your assets when you die. You will name a personal representative (executor) to pay final expenses and taxes and distribute the remaining assets. Name a guardian to raise your minor children if both parents die.
  • A durable power of attorney – You give a trusted individual management power over your assets if you can't manage them yourself. This document is effective only while you're alive.
  • Health care power of attorney – You choose someone to make medical decisions on your behalf if something were to happen and you can't make them yourself.
  • Living will – Share your intentions about life-sustaining medical measures if you are terminally ill. No one is given the authority to speak for you.
  • Revocable living trust – You can provide for continued management of your financial matters while you are alive, after your death, and even for generations after.

Why beneficiary designations are important

Beneficiary designations can be an easy way to transfer an account or insurance policy when you die. But if you didn't complete beneficiary designations, or haven't updated them, they can cause issues with your estate plan.

Designations on forms are often filled out without much thought – but they're important and deserve your attention. Beneficiary designations on forms like your insurance policy and 401(k) take priority over other estate planning documents, like your will or trust.

Let's say you specify in your will that you want everything to go to your spouse after your death. But you never changed the beneficiary designation on your life insurance policy and it names your ex-spouse. Your ex may end up getting the proceeds.
 

Turn to a team of professionals

Making the decisions involved with estate planning may seem overwhelming. It doesn't have to be. You can start by organizing your important documents.

Turn to a team of trusted professionals including BKM Wealth Management, an estate planning attorney, and your accountant. They know the questions to ask and can help you avoid potential pitfalls.

If you currently don't have relationships with an attorney and an accountant, we can make some introductions. We can also discuss our role in the planning process and help you get started.
 

Next steps

  • Make an appointment with us to talk about your estate planning goals.
  • Start gathering your financial documents.
  • Check the beneficiary designations on your financial and investment accounts.

 

BKM Wealth Management does not offer tax or legal advice.