An Estate Plan To-Do List to Get Planning Done

Whether you’ve experienced a marriage, divorce, the birth of a child, or the loss of a loved one, it’s crucial to ensure that your plan aligns with your current circumstances.

Even if your New Year’s resolutions have fallen by the wayside, don’t let the resolution to create or revise your estate plan pass without tackling it. A recent San Francisco Bay Times article, “Kickstart 2025 With 5 Estate Planning Resolutions to Secure Your Future,” offers a step-by-step list of the tasks to complete your estate plan.

Start by locating your estate planning documents. Review them to be sure they’re up to date. If your will includes people no longer living or beneficiaries you’re no longer feeling generous towards, you’ll need to make those changes.

Review your estate plan with an eye on the people you’ve named for specific roles. Will the executor or trustee be a good fit? What about the person you’ve named as Power of Attorney? Your estate plan should also include a Healthcare Proxy. As you age, you need to be sure the people in these roles can still physically get to the bank or the hospital and navigate online banking or healthcare portals on your behalf.

Digital assets are now part of everyone’s life. However, not everyone addresses their digital assets in estate plans. You’ll need to review and record your digital accounts, from emails to social media to cryptocurrency, and create a list of the accounts, login information and passwords. If you have two or three-factor identification, you’ll need to be sure your digital executor can access your mobile phone or email to confirm their identity. Many people use password managers to gather their information. However, a notebook will do as long as your digital executor knows its location.

If you haven’t reviewed your healthcare directives in a while, you’ll want to do so. Your wish to be kept off any life-support systems while in your thirties may have changed as you have gotten older. After COVID, many people who would have never wanted to be on a respirator learned that it was lifesaving, not life-ending. Speak with your healthcare proxy about your wishes, so they know what you want and your estate planning attorney to ensure that they are documented properly.

An experienced estate planning attorney can help you avoid or minimize the probate process. For instance, placing assets in a trust can take the asset out of your taxable estate if the right trust is used. The assets in the trust won’t go through probate and will remain private. If using Payable on Death accounts makes sense for your estate plan, be sure that the accounts you want to transfer to someone else on your death are titled correctly.

An estate planning attorney will guide you through the process to ensure that you have the right documents, so your loved ones can help you if you become incapacitated and know your wishes when you die. It’s a gift to those you love, easing their burden and building your legacy.

Reference: San Francisco Bay Times (Feb. 5, 2025) “Kickstart 2025 With 5 Estate Planning Resolutions to Secure Your Future”

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