Articles Tagged with Asset Protection

Blended familiesCouples planning to blend families often have to make financial arrangements that respect previous relationships with ex-spouses and their families. Issues range from childcare and eldercare to potentially complex matters involving businesses, investment assets and real estate. That’s why involving trained experts in stepfamily financial planning is a must.

Blending families can get complicated quite quickly when dealing with finances and the like, so you should speak with an experienced estate planning attorney on these matters.

The Kenyon Leadergives us a nice checklist of issues and solutions potential spouses and partners should consider in a recent article titled Yours, mine and ours: planning step-family finances.

MP900314367 Create a file that you name sometime like "ICE," which stands for “in case of emergency.” Some people call this their “grab-and-go” file, since that’s what it’s for. Make sure that anyone who needs to have this information knows how to access it. For example, if you have to leave for the hospital in a hurry, this file will contain all your important information. Here’s what to put in there.

 Are you prepared for an emergency? Do you have all your files ready to go?

A recent article in the Ashland Daily Tidings, titled In the new year, be sure you have your 'ICE' file ready, suggests that you create a file named ICE—“in case of emergency” or the “grab-and-go” file. Make sure anyone who needs to have this information knows where it is, so if you have to leave for the hospital in a hurry, you’ll have all your important information.

  Bigstock-Couple-running-bookshop-13904324We asked experts to let us in on a few resources most people overlook.

Need more cash to help care for mom and dad? A recent Oprah Magazine article, titled Sanity-Saving Secrets For Caring For Your Aging Parents,has some ideas where to look for funds to support your parents in retirement.

 Here are some of those ideas from the original article:

MP900422340 (1)Here are some "Get's" that will help you prepare for the Medicaid application process.

Get going five years before you think you need to. Medicaid has a five-year look back to all your parents' financial dealings. Which means transactions conducted during that time may be counted in determining their program eligibility. With this requirement, it’s good to have your parents' banks' names and numbers accessible. Regulators are looking at two things: if you're hiding any money and if you've given any away.

Also, if one or both of your parents still live in the family home and you’d like to keep it, you should try to transfer ownership or set up a trust at least five years before they apply for Medicaid. Although there are some exceptions, typically if you don’t address this issue, you will be forced to sell the home.

MP900409255If history is a guide, this coming week nearly half of us will make resolutions seeking to improve some facet of our lives, many of which will be focused on personal finance. If one of your goals for the New Year is to get your financial life in order, here are a few key areas which should be included on your 2015 financial planning checklist.

As you begin compiling your 2015 financial goals, one of the first items on your list should be to calculate how much money you'll need in retirement. It’s one of the most significant math problems you’ll do after you finish grade school. Once you have arrived at the answer to this math problem, you need to examine if that answer will create a problem for you as you prepare for retirement.

With that target in place, pay heed to the advice in an article from Seacoastonline.com titled Start your 2015 financial planning checklist.Consequently, you should create a strategy that will help you achieve that goal. A savings plan is one method you can use—and take maximum advantage of any tax-deferred savings opportunities available to you along the way.

MP900442501The Journal has consulted several local professionals with expertise in various financially related realms. We asked each for tips readers can take with them into 2015.

As we enter 2015, many Americans will start to shift gears to tax season and filing their 2014 tax returns. Just make sure you are aware of potential penalties, particularly regarding health insurance.

Starting in 2014, all nonexempt U.S. citizens and legal permanent residents must maintain minimum essential health-insurance coverage. This requirement is discussed in a recent Albuquerque Journal article titled Tips help prep for improved finances.”

Front porchMake a detailed plan for the home's future to avoid family feuds down the road.

Many memories are made in family vacation homes, and a lot of families do not want those traditions to end when a loved one passes. However, experts say you need to be careful in planning so the home's future isn’t the source of feuding. The biggest mistake owners can make is to fail to make a detailed plan for the home's future, cautions a recent Kiplinger's Retirement Report article titled "How to Pass Down a Vacation Home."

 If an owner says “I don't care, I won't be here,” it rarely leads to a happy result. As we always say, besides honesty, communication is the best policy. Owners should meet with their adult children and spouses to create a plan for either keeping the vacation house in the family or selling it. Families can also get help from an experienced estate planning lawyer to develop ideas and plans.

In all likelihood, [film director] Nichols had a "revocable living trust," that contained the dispositive provisions of his estate so that his wishes were shielded from the public. 

Celebrities and high-profile estates tend to be a hot topic in the media, but sometimes the media doesn't get the full story.

 An article from The National Review, titled "The Death of Mike Nichols and Estate Planning," sheds some light on why we know so little about the estate of award winning director Mike Nichols.

MP900400665Wouldn’t knowing someone will step in if you become incapacitated create a little peace of mind? Wouldn’t knowing that your family is taken care of create even more peace of mind? Wouldn’t knowing there is a plan in place – a plan you developed – if something happens to you take a significant weight off your shoulders?

Estate planning can do a lot of things for you, but one of the most valuable takeaways is peace of mind.

A recent Forbes article, titled 11 Fundamental Elements of a Stress-Free Estate Plan, provides practical advice on how to design a plan that protects your assets and provides for loved ones. While everyone’s individual needs are a bit different, there are some basic components you need to examine along with deciding who gets what.

Bigstock-Elder-Couple-With-Bills-3557267The secret, experts say, is to find a balance between keeping some comforting traditions and letting go of ones that obviously no longer fit.

How do you manage the holidays on a retiree budget? If you are a retiree or will be retiring in the coming year or years, then this article may be for you.

Experts say that the key is to find a balance between keeping some of the traditions and saying goodbye to those that no longer fit.

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