
How Does an Estate Plan Address Young Beneficiaries?
Minor children and young adult beneficiaries in particular need more specialized provisions to protect both the assets and the beneficiaries.

Minor children and young adult beneficiaries in particular need more specialized provisions to protect both the assets and the beneficiaries.

While adding a child to your home’s deed might seem straightforward to manage your estate, it’s fraught with potential problems and complications. This article reviews the implications and alternatives to adding a child to your home’s deed, with the goal of ensuring your estate plan is effective, efficient, and aligned with your long-term intentions.

Life insurance is a pivotal component of a comprehensive estate plan. Integrating life insurance policies into estate planning can provide financial security for your heirs and ensure that your estate is distributed according to your wishes. When used effectively, life insurance can…

A highly successful estate-management strategy for avoiding inheritance disputes is to make a meticulously detailed and legally sound will.

Millennials and Gen Zers are taking their estate planning seriously. These tips can help make the process seem less daunting.

It can be fun to daydream what life would be like if you hit the Powerball for $1.7 billion, but for most people, windfalls aren’t quite as exciting.

Estate planning legal matters are already confusing enough, so it certainly does not help to have similar names for related but completely different documents.

You’ve likely heard your friends or family—or even the bank teller, at times—counsel you to add an adult child to your bank account.

Somewhere along the way, homeowners came to believe a non sequitur of sorts, that the “American Dream” includes not only buying a house but also passing that same home on to their children. Financial advisers have largely supported this tactic for passing along generational wealth.

Receiving a financial windfall like an inheritance can be an emotional time — one that might prevent you from seeing the bigger picture.