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Tag: Estate Planning

Estate Planning

Distributing your assets – Estate planning in plain English

Estate Planning

You spend a large part of your life working to earn money to look after yourself, to provide for your family and to save for the future. Given the focus that is placed on creating wealth while you are alive, it seems logical to want some control over what happens to these assets once you are gone.

Estate planning is about giving you that control. Control to make sure that:

  • the people you care about are looked after once you are gone, and
  • your assets are passed to the people you want to receive them.

Who benefits from estate planning?

Estate planning is beneficial for everyone. The more complicated your personal and financial affairs, the more important it is to have an estate plan.
Planning for the future becomes more important at certain times in your life, such as:

  • getting married, living with a partner, separating or getting divorced
  • having children, including step-children
  • moving house, interstate or overseas
  • buying real estate or other valuable assets
  • family separation involving other family members
  • buying, selling or operating a business
  • setting up a family trust or company, or
  • if you have family members with special needs or children who are vulnerable.

What’s involved in estate planning?

There are three main tools that can help you with your succession planning.

  1. A Will
  2. Powers of Attorney
  3. Superannuation nominations

Making a Will

A Will is a legal document that outlines how you want your assets and possessions distributed upon your death. It can cover a range of special requests including providing for children, guardianship or your charitable objectives.

What happens if you don’t have a Will?

Dying without a Will is called ‘dying intestate’. When this happens, the court will appoint an administrator and your assets will be distributed according to a strict formula. This formula may not be in line with your intentions, and the outcome may not be in the best interests of your family and loved ones.

What should you consider when preparing a Will?

  • Who do you want to be your beneficiaries?
  • Who will you choose as the executor of your Will?
  • Do you have any specific bequests?
  • What assets need to be included?
  • What are the tax implications?

When should you update your Will?

Your Will should be reviewed and updated whenever there are major changes in your life, such as:

  • marriage, separation or divorce
  • birth of children
  • death of family members
  • significant changes to the value of your assets
  • significant changes to the way you own assets, such as the formation of a family trust or self-managed superannuation fund
  • entering a new business or change to existing business structures, or
  • retirement.

What is not distributed through your Will?

  • Assets owned in joint names pass directly to the surviving owner.
  • Superannuation benefits are generally governed by the superannuation fund trustee. However, a binding nomination can be made to certain beneficiaries including your estate.
  • The payout from a life insurance policy where you have nominated a beneficiary to benefit directly from the policy.

Testamentary trusts

A testamentary trust can be established in a Will and results in the trustee looking after the assets on behalf of the beneficiaries. It can be an effective estate planning tool because it allows the trustee to distribute income from the estate to the beneficiaries in a tax efficient manner.

Children under 18 who receive income from a testamentary trust are subject to adult tax rates, rather than minor penalty rates.
A testamentary trust can also protect assets from spendthrift or bankrupt beneficiaries who may be prone to misuse assets they inherit.

Powers of Attorney

A Power of Attorney is a legal document allowing you to appoint someone to act on your behalf. When in force, the signature of the person you appoint as your Power of Attorney has the same legal force as your own.

The rules relating to powers of attorney vary from state to state and there are different types of Powers of Attorney; each with a different purpose:

General Power of Attorney

Allows someone to act on your behalf with regard to your personal and financial affairs. You can set limitations around the powers if you wish, defining specific timeframes or asset boundaries. For example, you can nominate someone to operate a specified bank account or sell a specific asset while you are overseas. All General Powers of Attorney become void if you lose your mental capacity to make decisions.

Enduring Power of Attorney

Similar to a General Power of Attorney, but it is not automatically revoked if you become mentally incapable. An Enduring Power of Attorney can make important financial decisions in the event of your absence, illness or incapacity.

Enduring Guardian Advanced Health Directive

Allows you to nominate someone to make health care decisions on your behalf. It is not revoked if you lose your mental capacity. Some of the decisions that a Guardian can make include those relating to your future medical, surgical or dental treatment and other health care, including palliative care and life-sustaining measures.

  • what future health treatment you have, including the medical practitioner who should treat you
  • whether to donate organs
  • where you should live
  • whether to participate in experimental health care, and
  • whether to have life-sustaining treatment withheld or withdrawn.

Superannuation nominations

Your superannuation savings do not typically form part of the assets that are distributed via your Will. This is a crucial consideration for the succession of your wealth, because if structured correctly, your super savings can be received tax free when they are passed on to your beneficiaries. Correspondingly, if your preferences for your super savings are not structured correctly, the consequences for your savings can be damaging. Superannuation savings paid to someone other than your spouse, your minor child, or someone who is financially dependent on you, can be taxed up to 32 per cent.

What happens to your super when you die?

The trustee of your superannuation fund has the ultimate discretion about who to pay your superannuation savings to, unless you have a binding nomination.

What is a binding nomination?

A binding nomination gives you certainty about who will receive your super savings. It allows you to choose who receives your benefits at the time of your death.
It must generally be updated at least every three years, and witnessed by two adults not identified in your nomination.

How do you get started?

Estate planning is a complex area that requires careful consideration. You will need the expertise of a solicitor and accountant, in conjunction with the guidance of a financial adviser.
Estate planning is an important part of managing your financial affairs. It will ensure that your wishes are carried out once you are gone, and help to protect the financial future of your family.

Children are the most important consideration for your Will

Without question, the most important consideration when preparing your Will is your children, in particular young children.

Your Will should detail who you want to take care of your children in the event of your death, as well as how you want them to be cared for. Your Will should include instructions for the appointment of a guardian who can legally act on behalf of your children, as well as specific instructions for their upbringing.

This can prevent messy feuds down the track, especially in the case of blended families and where both parents pass away at the same time.

Another consideration where minor children are involved is tax management. It is important to get the right advice to ensure your Will is structured correctly.

 

Does your estate plan need a review?

For more help and strategies speak to your adviser at SFP. Or if you don’t have an adviser yet let us arrange an appointment, contact us on 02 9328 0876.

 

This article contains information that is general in nature. It does not take into account the objectives, financial situation or needs of any particular person. You need to consider your financial situation and needs before making any decisions based on this information.

 

 

Marriage in Later Life

Marriage in later life

Marriage in Later Life

So, if you’re considering marriage, perhaps for a second time or more, give thought to the financial implications of marrying later in life and sidestepping some of the money-related hazards.

Financially, there are two important areas to address. Probably not for the wedding day speeches – but what happens to your money if you get divorced, and what happens to it when you die? 

The answers largely depend on, in whose name your assets are held, and what you specify in your will. And let me stress, it’s essential you have a properly drawn-up will. It’s the only way to ensure your estate goes to whom you want it to. 

Let’s assume you are both getting married for a second time, and both of you have children from your previous marriages. You have to decide what assets you wish to keep in your own name and control, degree to which you combine assets, and what is passed onto your children if you die before your spouse. 

Home ownership choices

If you want to own a home together, you’ll need to choose whether to buy it as ‘joint tenants’ or ‘tenants in common’. If it’s the former and one person dies, their partner automatically owns 100% of the property, whereas with ‘tenants in common’, if one partner dies their half share in the property goes to whomever it is willed to. When there are children involved and inheritance issues to deal with, ownerships of assets such as the new marital home require careful consideration – and maybe a family conference. 

Consider super

Then there’s super. While there’s been a big move towards self-managed super, setting up a SMSF with your new spouse, as opposed to maintaining your own super fund, needs careful consideration. Your new spouse may have a different attitude to investment risk than you, leading to investments you may not be happy with. And in the unfortunate outcome your second marriage fails, getting out of a self-managed super fund is much messier than keeping your own super in your own name. Just make sure you specify, via a ‘binding nomination’, to whom your super is to go, such as your children.

Financial agreements

Many couples marrying later in life have a financial agreement drawn up by a lawyer before they tie the knot. This binding agreement spells out what assets each party brings to the union, and who gets what in the event the marriage collapses. While not very romantic, Australian lawyers have more recently shied away from these agreements in the event they get challenged in court and are found not to be watertight, leading to problems for the lawyer! There is still a case for entering into a financial agreement before marriage, particularly if there is a significant disparity between the wealth of the spouses. Just make sure a good lawyer draws it up.

Getting married again, or in your later years, particularly if you have children and/or significant assets, is a key time when seeking advice and assistance from professional advisers, both financial and legal, is likely to be a good idea.

 

Need a professional to go through things?

For more help and professional advice on what things you should put in place, book a coffee or call us on 02 9328 0876.

 

Article by AMP Life Limited

General Disclaimer: This article contains information that is general in nature. It does not take into account the objectives, financial situation or needs of any particular person. You need to consider your financial situation and needs before making any decisions based on this information. Please seek personal financial advice prior to acting on this information.