business law

7 Estate Planning Tips for Quarantine

7 Estate Planning Tips for Quarantine

What a strange time to be alive.

Some people have been in quarantine for nearly two months, while others are still adjusting after “only” (those are sarcastic quotation marks) a few weeks in isolation.

No matter which way you slice it, Coronavirus (COVID-19) has affected all of us.

I’ve talked with a lot of people over the past month who desperately want to create or update their estate plans to deal with Coronavirus but who don’t want to go to an attorney’s office.

Although I have written before about the dangers of “Do It Yourself” estate planning, here are 7 things you can do during quarantine to organize your affairs WITHOUT needing to leave home:

1. Draft a letter of instruction.

If you died today, would your representatives know how to settle your estate?

The purpose of an estate planning letter of instruction is to provide information to help guide your loved ones or other representatives through the process of settling your affairs.

I’m not talking about advice regarding probate or other legal matters. I’m talking about information that isn’t included in any of the documents you will get from an attorney.

A letter of instruction can answer questions such as:

IRS Increases 2020 Estate Tax Exemption

IRS Increases 2020 Estate Tax Exemption

The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) just announced that the estate and gift tax exemption for 2020 is increasing to $11.58 million per person — up from $11.40 million in 2019.

If you are like most people, you are probably asking, “What does that actually mean?”

What is the Estate & Gift Tax Exemption?

As I explained in the summary of estate and gift taxes I wrote last year:

The estate tax is a federal tax imposed on estates over a certain value. That “certain value” is known as the “estate tax exemption” or “combined estate and gift tax exemption” or “unified credit” or a dozen other names.

The main thing to know is this: if an estate is worth more than the estate tax exemption amount, the value over the exemption will be taxed. If the estate is worth less than the exemption amount, no tax liability.

So the increase announced yesterday by the IRS means that if an estate is created (i.e., if a person dies) in 2020, there will be no estate tax imposed if the estate is worth less than $11.58 million. And thanks to estate tax portability, a married couple can now shield double that amount, $23.16 million, from estate taxes in 2020.

An Overview of Your Digital Assets

An Overview of Your Digital Assets

Digital property (or digital assets) can be understood as any information about you or created by you that exists in digital form, either online or on an electronic storage device, including the information necessary to access the digital asset. All of your digital property comprises what is known as your digital estate.

What Is Digital Property?

For the purposes of digital estate planning, digital property can be broken down into three main categories:

  • Personal digital property

  • Personal digital property with monetary value

  • Digital business property

Personal Digital Property

Personal digital property includes:

  • Computing hardware, such as computers, external hard drives or flash drives, tablets, smartphones, digital music players, e-readers, digital cameras, and other digital devices

  • Any information or data that is stored electronically, whether stored online, in the cloud, or on a physical device

  • Any online accounts, such as email and communications accounts, social media accounts, shopping accounts, photo and video sharing accounts, video gaming accounts, online storage accounts, and websites and blogs that you may manage

  • Domain names

  • Intellectual property, including copyrighted materials, trademarks, and any code you may have written and own

What's on Your Estate Planning “Bucket List”

What's on Your Estate Planning “Bucket List”

Everybody knows what a “bucket list” is, right?

It’s a list (duh) of things you want to do before you die (i.e. “kick the bucket”). I won’t get into the weeds about the concept, so if you want to learn more about bucket lists and also ugly-cry through two boxes of Kleenex, watch the 2007 film The Bucket List with Morgan Freeman and Jack Nicholson.

But back to the blog.

Just as you and Morgan Freeman and Jack Nicholson have a bucket list for life, you should also have a bucket list for estate planning. Ask yourself: What do I need to do to arrange my affairs before I die?

Estate planning is about more than just legal documents. A good plan means accounting for your assets and providing the information, documents, and knowledge necessary to ensure a smooth transfer of those assets to the people you want to have them.

To help you create your own estate planning bucket list, here are 10 tips you can use to organize your estate before you die:

1. Get a Will or Trust.

Of course the first item on the bucket list is to create an actual estate plan. I’m an estate planning attorney writing on an estate planning blog. What did you expect?

Formal estate planning documents such as a Last Will and Testament or a Living Trust are crucial to make the administration of your estate as easy as possible. Without them, your estate could be tied up in messy probate — in some cases for years.

Estate Planning for Entrepreneurs

Estate Planning for Entrepreneurs

As an entrepreneur, your life is often consumed by your business. But have you stopped to consider what would happen to your business if you are injured?

If you come down with an illness?

If you suddenly die?

Entrepreneurs who fail to create an estate plan leave their life’s work at risk of being torn apart or lost entirely after they are gone. To keep that from happening, here are a few estate planning documents every entrepreneur should consider: