U.S. Capital

Virginia Beach Estate Planning Attorney Discusses Why Trusts Are Still Important

Feb 29, 2016

Hook Law Center (formerly Oast & Hook)

Hook Law Center (formerly Oast & Hook)

Virginia Beach, VA (Law Firm Newswire) February 29, 2016 – An estate-planning method that was one time frequently used was an irrevocable trust that held a life insurance policy, with the objective that the death benefit be used to pay estate taxes.

This technique permitted the policy’s benefits to be applied toward payment of the estate taxes of the individual who died without inclusion of the policy in the estate.

Although this method remains useful, it is not as common because the threshold for being affected by the estate tax has increased to such a degree that only the affluent have cause for concern. Nevertheless, trusts are still a popular estate-planning vehicle. Irrevocable trusts, which cannot be modified after they are created, have diminished in use, but revocable trusts, which are governed by the grantor, are prevalent.

“Trusts are a valuable estate planning tool that can be instrumental in safeguarding the grantor’s assets and in ensuring that the grantor’s heirs are financially secure,” said Andrew H. Hook, a prominent Virginia estate planning attorney with Hook Law Center with offices in Virginia Beach and northern Suffolk.

A trust can be established with several types of property, including cash, real estate, life-insurance proceeds and securities. A trust is often used to provide income and bequests to the grantor’s heirs, or trust beneficiaries, in such a way that it acknowledges distinctions among the heirs. One possibility is that the trust could provide only for the surviving spouse until the death of that spouse, and subsequently, for the children and grandchildren. Or the trust could simultaneously provide for the spouse and children.

Payments could be made from the trust when the children reach specific ages, or when certain events occur. For example, funds could be applied toward college tuition, or graduate or professional school. Or payments could be made at the time an heir gets married or has a child. Trusts can also be used as a way to have the grantor’s assets professionally managed. As the grantor becomes advanced in age, there may be a reduction in the level of confidence regarding financial matters, and an increase in the need for an experienced trustee, who can serve as an adviser and as someone who makes decisions concerning how the assets are to be handled.

Furthermore, trusts are used for asset protection. The trustee is usually the legal owner of the trust property, and the heirs are beneficial owners. When the beneficiaries lack the right to demand the property, the beneficiaries’ creditors have no access to the assets. Creditors and estranged spouses of heirs are unable to reach the assets.

Learn more at http://www.hooklawcenter.com/

Hook Law Center
295 Bendix Road, Suite 170
Virginia Beach, Virginia 23452-1294
Phone: 757-399-7506
Fax: 757-397-1267

SUFFOLK
5806 Harbour View Blvd.
Suite 203
Suffolk VA 23435
Phone: 757-399-7506
Fax: 757-397-1267
http://www.hooklawcenter.com/

  • Early retirees may need alternative withdrawal strategies
    When withdrawing funds from individual retirement accounts, Roth IRAs and other such accounts, retirees may encounter inconveniences, taxes and penalties. However, proper planning may reduce or even eliminate such costs. There are techniques that retirees should use to withdraw funds from their tax-sheltered retirement accounts prior to reaching the age of 59 ½. You can […]
  • How to deal with an early retirement that was not planned
    Although most people plan to work until they reach their full retirement age of 66, or 67 if you were born after 1942, some workers find themselves without work at an age when it is challenging to find another job, and at a time when they anticipated earning their maximum salary. Others are compelled to […]
  • Understanding the stages of Alzheimer’s
    Reportedly, over five million Americans are afflicted with Alzheimer’s. The Alzheimer’s Association has created a checklist of the usual symptoms to help you identify the warning signs. Among these are changes in memory that interfere with daily life, difficulty planning and resolving problems, becoming disoriented regarding time and place and having issues with words when […]
  • Transportation is an often overlooked but crucial aspect of retirement planning
    When people engage in retirement planning, they often fail to think about transportation. They do not consider that a time may come when they will no longer be able to drive themselves, and will have to rely on others to go to doctors’ appointments and run errands. Including transportation in your retirement plan is essential. […]
  • How caregivers can deal with behavioral changes of loved ones with dementia
    There is ample research to suggest that family caregivers are more distressed by behavioral problems and changes in the personality of their loved ones than by their physical disabilities. For instance, while it may prove challenging for family members to physically pick up the body of a loved one who has suffered a stroke and […]