Asset Protection ⋆ Estate Planning Lawyer ⋆ Vicknair Law Firm Louisiana Estate Planning, Probate, Trust, Tax, and Business Attorney Tue, 30 Sep 2025 18:35:57 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.3 https://vicknairlawfirm.com/wp-content/uploads/cropped-favicon-300p-32x32.png Asset Protection ⋆ Estate Planning Lawyer ⋆ Vicknair Law Firm 32 32 What Should I Know About Long-Term Care? https://vicknairlawfirm.com/what-should-i-know-about-long-term-care/ Tue, 18 Apr 2023 15:22:04 +0000 https://vicknairlawfirm.com/?p=11627 What Should I Know About Long-Term Care?

Long-term care insurance is a specialty type of insurance that helps pay for costs that are typically connected with long-term care. This can include items such as care given in a hospital, nursing home services, medical services provided in your home and treatment for dementia.

WGN’s recent article entitled “10 Crucial Things to Know about Long-Term Care“ looks at these important items.

  1. The Biggest Financial Threat. The most significant threat to your financial nest egg is long-term care. About 70% of people over 65 will need some kind of long-term care during their life. The national average for home health care services is $16,743 per month. However, there are ways to manage this without buying a traditional long-term care insurance policy where “you use it or lose it.”
  2. Long-Term Care Insurance is Really “Lifestyle” Insurance. It’s NOT nursing home insurance.
  3. Reverse Mortgages. These have become a popular and accepted way of paying for expenses, including the cost of long-term care. Reverse mortgages are designed to keep seniors at home longer. A reverse mortgage can pay for in-home care, home repair, home modification and other needs.
  4. Using Medicaid to Pay For Long-Term Care. This should be a last resort to pay for long-term care, but it also may be the only way to protect family assets. Medicaid will pay for long-term care, but certain criteria must be satisfied. If you have too many assets, you may not qualify. Talk to an elder law attorney to get qualified amd before applying for Medicaid.
  5. Important Considerations When Selecting a Long-Term Care Plan. Four things to consider: (i) go with a company with an AM BEST rating of A+ or better; (ii) the assets of the insurance company should be in the billions; (iii) some long-term care insurers will allow for group discounts through employers, or “affinity” group discounts through a local organization; and (iv) the tax advantages for tax-qualified long-term care insurance plans. At the federal level, premiums for long-term care insurance fall into the “medical expense” category. On the state level, 26 states offer some form of deduction or tax credit for long-term care insurance premiums.
  6. The Annuity-Based Long-Term Care & The Pension Protection Act. In 2006, this law was enacted to permit those with annuity contracts to have long-term care riders with special tax advantages. The Act allows the cash value of annuity contracts to be used to pay premiums on long-term care contracts.
  7. Asset-Based Long-Term Care Solutions. The best planning approach for those who choose to self-insure is to “invest” some of their legacy assets so the assets can be worth as much as possible whenever they may be needed to pay for care. If unneeded, the money would then pass to the intended heirs, with no “use it or lose it” issues as with conventional long-term care insurance.
  8. Long-Term Care Strategy Using IRA Money. Most people use their IRA to supplement retirement. However, sometimes waiting until age 72 when mandatory required minimum distribution rules apply, some people have instead opted to take a portion of their IRA and fund an IRA-based annuity which then systematically funds a 20-pay life insurance plan with long-term care features. This type of IRA-based long-term care policy is unique in the sense that it starts out as an IRA annuity policy, also known as a tax-qualified annuity, and then over a 20-year period makes equal distribution internally to the insurance carrier and funds the life insurance.
  9. Important Documents for Long-Term Care Planning. Ask an experienced estate planning attorney about a power of attorney for health care and financial power of attorney, as well as an advance directive or living will.
  10. Using Veterans Benefits to Pay For Long-Term Care. The VA offers a special pension: the Aid and Attendance (A&A) Benefit. This is a “pension benefit” and is not dependent upon service-related injuries for compensation.

BOOK A CALL with me, Ted Vicknair, Louisiana Board Certified Estate Planning and Administration Specialist, Louisiana Board Certified Tax Law Specialist, and Louisiana CPA to learn more about estate planning in Louisiana, incapacity planning, and Louisiana asset protection.

If you liked this article, “What Should I Know About Long-Term Care?” read also these additional articles: What Do Seniors Say About Aging in Place? and The Difference between Revocable and Irrevocable Trust and What Is Asset Protection Planning? and Do I Need a Prenup?

Reference: WGN (2022) “10 Crucial Things to Know about Long-Term Care“

 

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What Do People Think About Government-Paid Long-Term Care? https://vicknairlawfirm.com/what-do-people-think-about-government-paid-long-term-care/ Tue, 11 Apr 2023 11:00:15 +0000 https://vicknairlawfirm.com/?p=11626 What Do People Think About Government-Paid Long-Term Care?

About 50% of adults say that assistance for older adults should be funded by Medicare and Medicaid, according to an Associated Press-NORC Center poll.

MSN’s recent article entitled “Bipartisan support for policies to pay long-term care costs: Poll” says that 75% of adults surveyed say long-term care should be funded through Medicare Advantage or supplemental insurance programs. Close to two-thirds of respondents also said they’d support a government-administered insurance program, government funding for low-income people to receive long-term care at home and Social Security earnings credit or tax breaks for those providing long-term care to a senior.

Overall, 66% of respondents said they think it’s the federal government’s responsibility to make sure all people in the U.S. have health insurance coverage, with 73% of people aged 18-49 likely to support vs. 53% of those aged 50 and older.

Republican and Democratic responses were about the same, according to the poll.

About the same number of Republicans and Democrats favor nontaxable funds to pay for long-term care insurance—about 70%. The largest party difference was about the option for low-income people to receive government-funded, long-term care in their homes. Roughly 84% of Democrats supported this, compared to 55% of Republicans.

Overall public satisfaction with the U.S. healthcare system is low. Just 12% think the government is handling healthcare very or extremely well. When asked about healthcare specifics, 74% of adults said the U.S. handles prescription medication costs or mental healthcare “not too/not at all well,” and 70% said the same about mental healthcare.

The survey found that whites had a more negative view of the U.S. healthcare system compared to black and Hispanic adult respondents. When looking at healthcare for older adults, 56% of white adults think it is not too/not at all handled well, with 49% of Hispanic adults and 44% of black adults responding the same.

The poll consisted of 1,505 interviews between July 28 and August 1, with a 3.6% margin of error.

Under current law, MediCARE will only pay for the first 100 days of long term care.  After that, to pay for long term care, you need to either (a) have long term care insurance, (b) private pay out of your own funds (which will run at least $6,500 per month up to $9,000 per month in Louisiana); or (c) qualify for MediCAID Long Term Care benefits.  MediCAID is different from MediCARE.  MediCAID is a means based program intended for the poor, so to qualify and avoid losing your assets to nursing home poverty, it is best to get your plan in order well before you need to go into the nursing home.  I can help save at least half your assets even with a MediCAID crisis plan, but it is better to save all of your assets rather than merely half.

BOOK A CALL with me, Ted Vicknair, Louisiana Board Certified Estate Planning and Administration Specialist, Louisiana Board Certified Tax Law Specialist, and Louisiana CPA to learn more about estate planning in Louisiana, incapacity planning, and Louisiana asset protection.

If you liked this article, “What Do People Think About Government-Paid Long-Term Care?” read also these additional articles: The Difference between Revocable and Irrevocable Trust and What Is Asset Protection Planning? and Do I Need a Prenup? and Can a 529 Plan Help with Estate Planning?

Reference: MSN (Sep. 12, 2022) “Bipartisan support for policies to pay long-term care costs: Poll”

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The Difference between Revocable and Irrevocable Trust https://vicknairlawfirm.com/the-difference-between-revocable-and-irrevocable-trust/ Tue, 11 Apr 2023 00:42:39 +0000 https://vicknairlawfirm.com/?p=11625 The Difference between Revocable and Irrevocable Trust

A living trust can be revocable or irrevocable, says Yahoo Finance’s recent article entitled “Revocable vs. Irrevocable Trusts: Which Is Better?” And not everyone needs a trust. For some, a will may be enough. However, if you have substantial assets you plan to pass on to family members or to charity, a trust can make this much easier. Keep in mind that both revocable trusts and irrevocable trusts avoid probate for the assets that are transferred to them.

A revocable trust is a trust that can be changed or terminated at any time during the lifetime of the grantor (i.e., the person making the trust). This means you could:

  • Add or remove beneficiaries at any time
  • Transfer new assets into the trust or remove ones that are in it
  • Change the terms of the trust concerning how assets should be managed or distributed to beneficiaries; and
  • Terminate or end the trust completely.

When you die, a revocable trust automatically becomes irrevocable and no further changes can be made to its terms. An irrevocable trust is permanent. If you create an irrevocable trust during your lifetime, any assets you transfer to the trust must stay in the trust. You can’t add or remove beneficiaries.  But you may be able to change certain terms of the trust, as long as they are purely “administrative” terms.  In other words, changing the successor trustees.  But  changing the beneficiaries may not be allowed under Louisiana law.

The big advantage of choosing a revocable trust is flexibility. A revocable trust allows you to make changes, and an irrevocable trust doesn’t. Revocable trusts can also allow your heirs to avoid probate when you die. However, a revocable trust doesn’t offer the same type of protection against creditors as an irrevocable trust. If you’re sued, creditors could still try to attach trust assets to satisfy a judgment. The assets in a revocable trust are part of your taxable estate and subject to federal estate taxes when you die.

An irrevocable trust has a big advantage: it can allow you to become qualified for long-term care benefits.  Plus, it can protect your assets from creditors, and in certain cases, irrevocable trusts can also help in managing estate tax obligations. The assets are owned by the trust (not you), so estate taxes can be avoided.

When it comes to most irrevocable trusts, you can act as your own trustee.  However, acting as your own trustee for some irrevocable trusts that are established for estate tax avoidance purposes is not suggested.

Speak with an experienced estate planning or probate attorney to see if a revocable or an irrevocable trust is best or whether you even need a trust at all.

I wrote a more detailed blog post entilted “What is the Main Purpose of a Trust” which can be obtained here: https://vicknairlawfirm.com/what-is-the-main-purpose-of-a-trust/

BOOK A CALL with me, Ted Vicknair, Louisiana Board Certified Estate Planning and Administration Specialist, Louisiana Board Certified Tax Law Specialist, and Louisiana CPA to learn more about estate planning in Louisiana, incapacity planning, and Louisiana asset protection.

If you liked this article, “The Difference between Revocable and Irrevocable Trust” read also these additional articles: What Is Asset Protection Planning? and Do I Need a Prenup? and Can a 529 Plan Help with Estate Planning? and Can You Prevent Family Fights over Inheritance?

Reference: Yahoo Finance (Sep. 10, 2022) “Revocable vs. Irrevocable Trusts: Which Is Better?”

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What Is Asset Protection Planning? https://vicknairlawfirm.com/what-is-asset-protection-planning/ Tue, 04 Apr 2023 16:00:25 +0000 https://vicknairlawfirm.com/?p=11623 What Is Asset Protection Planning?

Yahoo’s recent article entitled “How to Protect Your Money, Even If You’re Not Rich” says that contrary to what many people believe, asset protection planning isn’t just for the wealthy. The estates of anyone, in any income group, can be sued or suffer from hefty taxation.

The following strategies in a good asset protection plan can mitigate the effect of creditor claims and other issues on your wealth.

If you want and need to protect your assets, you should be proactive. However, if you have significant debt and few assets and you are subject to a lawsuit, it may be better to file for bankruptcy than to create an asset protection plan.

That’s because it’s only worth it if you have significant assets, although some events cannot be protected against. These include tax liens, mechanics liens, alimony judgments and child support claims.

An plan benefits these people the most:

  • Anyone with a significant amount of assets.
  • Anyone with a significant, recurring amount of credit card debt.
  • Homeowners underwater on their mortgage (your mortgage balance is greater than the value of your home).
  • Anyone whose profession carries with it a high probability of liability, such as doctors and attorneys.

Some assets aren’t subject to creditors, such as retirement accounts under the protection of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA).

You may also legally preserve a small portion of your home equity. But Louisiana residents should not rely on this.  The amount exempt from seizure of Louisiana homeowners is only $35,000.  Contrast this with residents of Texas and Florida who generally have an unlimited exemption from seizure.

However, if you engage in asset protection planning ahead of time with a good estate planning attorney, your attorney can place your home into an asset protection trust, which can also qualify you for long-term care benefits and help your estate avoid probate, potentially saving you and your heirs tens of thousands, maybe hundreds of thousands, all while protecting your assets from lawsuits.  You really can have your cake and eat it too when it comes to asset protection planning.

For business owners or those who own property commercial or residental rental property, often an indespensible asset protection tool is a business entity such as a limited liability company or LLC.  But be careful with the use of corporations, since a C corporation or S corporation can have very negative income tax effects that you should avoid if you own appreciated or appreciating property.

The goal of asset protection planning is to set a level of legal separation between you and your assets. This allows you to legally shelter your assets from creditors without doing anything illegal.  This can be done through a good estate and asset protection attorney.

BOOK A CALL with me, Ted Vicknair, Louisiana Board Certified Estate Planning and Administration Specialist, Louisiana Board Certified Tax Law Specialist, and Louisiana CPA to learn more about estate planning in Louisiana, incapacity planning, and Louisiana asset protection.

If you liked this article, “What Is Asset Protection Planning?” read also these additional articles: Do I Need a Prenup? and Can a 529 Plan Help with Estate Planning? and Can You Prevent Family Fights over Inheritance?

Reference: Yahoo! (Nov. 6, 2022) “How to Protect Your Money, Even If You’re Not Rich”

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Do I Need a Prenup? https://vicknairlawfirm.com/do-i-need-a-prenup/ Sat, 01 Apr 2023 02:35:18 +0000 https://vicknairlawfirm.com/?p=11622 Do I Need a Prenup?

Forbes’ recent article entitled “Prenuptial Agreement: What Is A Prenup & How Do I Get One?” explains that a prenup contemplates the end of the marriage, so the couple can divide assets with an objective mindset. A pre-nup can even help protect a business.

Prenups allow you to determine if alimony will be due if the marriage ends, as well as the amount and terms of those payments. A pre-nup can also say what kind of bequests you leave to each other in your will. It can also be good for couples trying to keep separate significant pieces of personal property, including future inheritances and other anticipated income. This is common for couples with a significant age or wealth difference and among older or remarrying couples.

Prenups Aren’t Just for the Very Wealthy. Prenups can be a useful tool for almost everyone.

Protect Family Heirlooms. If you have a family heirloom and want to make sure that if your marriage ends, you’ll get to keep it, you can draft a prenuptial agreement that states the family heirloom is yours.

Pass Property to Children from Prior Marriages. A prenup can be used to establish property rights for second marriages. If you have children from a previous marriage, you can protect their interests in your assets and property.

Clarify Financial Rights. Prenups can help you decide now how assets will be split up instead of waiting until divorce proceedings. While divorce may never come, determining the financial distribution now saves time and headache.

Debt Protection. Prenups also provide debt protection. Some people enter a marriage with substantial financial debts, tax debts, or student loan debt. For couples in this situation, they can sign a prenup and clarify that those debts remain the separate responsibility of the spouse who incurred them, and thereby protect the income and assets of the other spouse.  They can also decide how debts incurred during the marriage will be handled.

Avoid Emotional Arguments. Divorce is emotional. It can be an overwhelming and upsetting process. When you’re negotiating with your spouse about assets, tempers can cloud your judgment about asset distribution. Contemplating these items with a clearer head is better for all.

In answering the question, “Do I need a Prenup?”, under Louisiana law, if you want a pre-nup after getting married (effectively a “post-nup”), you and your spouse have to petition the court in your parish of residence to have the community property regime dissolved judicially.  This can be an expensive process, and may not be used to avoid the unwanted debts that may have been already incurred.

Also, when answering the question, “Do I Need a Prenup?”, keep in mind that if you don’t have one, and one spouse has substantial “separate property”, the income produced by that separate property is community property.  This classification of the income from separate property as community property can include rents, interest, or other earnings from your separate property.  This can result in coomingling of your separate property with community property income over time.  In the event of a divorce, this can present a problem.  If you want to make sure that the income produced by your separate property remains separate, and you don’t have a pre-nup, you have to deliver to your spouse something called a “declaration of paraphernality”, and for it to be effective, you have to be able to prove that it was sent and delivered to your spouse.  Best to do this via certified mail.

BOOK A CALL with me, Ted Vicknair, Louisiana Board Certified Estate Planning and Administration Specialist, Louisiana Board Certified Tax Law Specialist, and Louisiana CPA to learn more about estate planning in Louisiana, incapacity planning, and Louisiana asset protection.

If you liked this article, “Do I Need a Prenup?” read also these additional articles: Can a 529 Plan Help with Estate Planning? and Can You Prevent Family Fights over Inheritance? and Top Five Estate Planning Mistakes and What Do You Need to Do When a Spouse Dies?

Reference: Forbes (Oct. 24, 2022) “Prenuptial Agreement: What Is A Prenup & How Do I Get One?”

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Will Making a Gift Conflict with Medicaid? https://vicknairlawfirm.com/will-making-a-gift-conflict-with-medicaid/ Mon, 05 Sep 2022 14:00:54 +0000 https://vicknairlawfirm.com/?p=11582 Will Making a Gift Conflict with Medicaid?

People usually make gifts for three reasons—because they enjoy giving gifts, because they want to protect assets, or minimize tax liability. However, gifting in one’s elder years can have expensive and unintended consequences, as reported in the article “IRS standards for gifting differ from Medicaid” from The News-Enterprise.

The IRS gift tax becomes expensive, if gifts are large. However, each individual has a lifetime gift exemption and, as of this writing, it is $12.06 million, which is historically high. A married couple may make a gift of $24.12 million. Most people don’t get anywhere near these levels. Those who do are advised to do estate and tax planning to protect their assets.

The current lifetime gift tax exemption is scheduled to drop to $5.49 million per person after 2025, unless Congress extends the higher exemption, which seems unlikely.

The IRS also allows an annual exemption. For 2022, the annual exemption is $16,000 per person. Anyone can gift up to $16,000 per person and to multiple people, without reducing their lifetime exemption.

People often confuse the IRS annual exclusion with Medicaid requirements for eligibility. IRS gift tax rules are totally different from Medicaid rules.

Medicaid does not offer an annual gift exclusion. Medicaid penalizes any gift made within 60 months before applying to Medicaid, unless there has been a specific exception.

For Medicaid purposes, gifts include outright gifts to individuals, selling property for less than fair market value, transferring assets to a trust, or giving away partial interests.

The Veterans Administration may also penalize gifts made within 36 months before applying for certain VA programs based on eligibility.

Gifting can have serious capital gains tax consequences. Gifts of real estate property to another person are given with the giver’s tax basis. When real property is inherited, the property is received with a new basis of fair market value.

For gifting high value assets, the difference in tax basis can lead to either a big tax bill or big tax savings. Let’s say someone paid $50,000 for land 40 years ago, and today the land is worth $650,000. The appreciation of the property is $600,000. If the property is gifted while the owner is alive, the recipient has a $50,000 tax basis. When the recipient sells the property, they will have to pay a capital gains tax based on the difference.  In other words, the recipient will have $600,000 of taxable capital gain income, something that could have easily been avoided with proper tax planning.

If the property was inherited, or held in a certain way to obtain the “step up” in tax basis, the tax would be either nothing or next to nothing.

You can have your cake and eat it too. A good estate, tax, and asset protection plan is available if you seek out a competent Board Certified Estate Planning and Administration Specialist and Board Certified Tax Law Specialsit.  Medicaid planning is complicated and requires the experience and knowledge of an elder law attorney. What worked for your neighbor may not work for you, as we don’t always know all the details of someone else’s situation.

BOOK A CALL with me, Ted Vicknair, Louisiana Board Certified Estate Planning and Administration Specialist, Louisiana Board Certified Tax Law Specialist, and Louisiana CPA to learn more about estate planning in Louisiana, incapacity planning, and Louisiana asset protection.

If you liked this article, “Will Making a Gift Conflict with Medicaid?” read also these additional articles: Does a Beneficiary have to Pay Taxes on 401(k)? and The Risks of Creating Your Own Estate Plan and Is A Medicaid Planner Right for Me? and Alert: Scam Targeting Medicare Recipients

Reference: The News-Enterprise (Aug. 6, 2022) “IRS standards for gifting differ from Medicaid”

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What Happens If Couple Divorce and Own Business? https://vicknairlawfirm.com/what-happens-if-couple-divorce-and-own-business/ Tue, 30 Aug 2022 14:00:54 +0000 https://vicknairlawfirm.com/?p=11514 What Happens If Couple Divorce and Own Business?

High-profile cases like the Bezos or the Gates should cause many people to consider how their business and marital assets are tied together. You need to have plans in place from the beginning. No one thinks their partnership will end. However, it’s necessary to have a plan in place, just in case.

The Dallas Business Journal’s recent article entitled “Does your business need a prenup?” explains that there are three typical outcomes when married couples working as business partners decide to end their relationship:

  • One individual buys out the other partner’s shares and continues running the business;
  • The partners sell the business and divide the proceeds; or
  • The couple continues working as partners after the divorce.

Safeguards can be put in place on the first day of the relationship to protect your personal and business assets in the event of a divorce. A way to do this is through a prenuptial agreement, which states what will happen if a split happens. A pre-nup should:

  • Establish the value of the business as of the date of marriage or the date the agreement is signed;
  • Detail a course of action with the appreciation or depreciation of the business from the date of the marriage;
  • Say how business value will be measured; and
  • Specify the allocation of business interests to be awarded to each spouse in the event of a divorce.

In addition to a prenuptial agreement, any privately held company should have a shareholder agreement (or “operating agreement” for non-corporations). The shareholder agreement is one of the most important documents owners of a closely held business will ever sign, but unfortunately, many businesses don’t have it.  It can also help to protect assets against judgment creditors and predators.

It controls the transfer of ownership when certain events occur, like divorce and states the following:

  • Which party will buy out the other’s shares of the company if a buyout occurs; or
  • If either party has the right to sell, how the ownership interest will be valued and the terms and conditions concerning the acquisition.

Because there are some tax implications involved in a buyout, it’s best to bring in experienced estate planning attorney who understands federal income tax law (and possibly federal estate tax law) for this process. In addition, life events like divorce or changes in a business partnership are an appropriate time to update your will, estate plans and any necessary insurance policies.

BOOK A CALL with me, Ted Vicknair, Louisiana Board Certified Estate Planning and Administration Specialist, Louisiana Board Certified Tax Law Specialist, and Louisiana CPA to learn more about estate planning in Louisiana, incapacity planning, and Louisiana asset protection.

If you liked this article, “What Happens If Couple Divorce and Own Business?” read also these additional articles: Can Some Foods Help Prevent Alzheimer’s? and Wayward Senior Tracked by Bluetooth Technology and What is the First Sign of Dementia? and Who Is the Best Person for Executor?

Reference: Dallas Business Journal (Aug. 1, 2022) “Does your business need a prenup?”

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Medicaid Crisis Plans for Long Term Care Costs https://vicknairlawfirm.com/medicaid-crisis-plans-for-long-term-care-costs/ Fri, 19 Aug 2022 03:08:11 +0000 https://vicknairlawfirm.com/?p=11303 Medicaid Crisis Plans for Long Term Care Costs

To the estate planning attorney, the situation is known as “crisis planning.” It almost always involves two things happening at once: the immediate need for additional healthcare and for a family’s assets to be protected. The end goal of crisis planning is to protect assets for both spouses, while ensuring that the sick spouse receives the care they need, as explained in the article “Crisis planning for couples focuses on asset protection” from The News-Enterprise.

What is Medicaid Crisis Planning?

Crisis planning for married couples requires a three-step process. First, does the spouse in crisis have the documents in place to allow another person to act on their behalf? This includes a financial power of attorney and a healthcare power of attorney.

Powers of Attorney need to be checked to ensure that they include specific powers needed to take action on the person’s behalf. These documents are “state specific,” meaning each state has laws determining what the POA must contain and how it must be prepared. Crisis planning requires a POA providing a broad set of powers, so agents can access and change documents like deeds, bank and investment accounts.

Once the documents and POAs are in hand, the next step is to get a detailed breakdown of the couple’s financial position and the cost of care. This becomes easier if the couple is organized and has information readily available for each income stream and asset.

What Information Will the Agent Need?

The agent must find several different types of financial documents. Proof of income for each income stream is needed. The actual proof of income will show taxes withdrawn or other deductions taken from income, such as health insurance.

The agent will also need access to several months of statements for each account, including bank statements, investment accounts, retirement accounts and deeds and titles for property. Proof of other assets, including insurance policies, burial plot deeds and other assets must also be included.

Some types of income and assets are countable, and some are non-countable. However, the non-countable income and assets may need to be considered, so the estate planning attorney will need to have all the information.

Medicaid Resource Assessment Request

Step three is to determine eligibility for programs and make the necessary applications. This will depend on the type of care needed. However, a typical crisis case is for nursing home care, which almost always means Medicaid eligibility. All income and assets are reported to Medicaid through a Resource Assessment request. The Medicaid office creates a breakdown of what will be counted against the applicant.

The remaining amount is what must be “spent down” for a person to be eligible for Medicaid coverage.

The most common way to do this is through a Medicaid Annuity. This annuity takes the spend down amount and returns the full amount as income to the spouse at home, effectively preserving the couple’s assets.

Crisis planning is stressful but does not have to be hopeless. By working with an experienced estate planning attorney and providing documentation as quickly as possible, health care needs can be met without the well spouse being impoverished.

BOOK A CALL with me, Ted Vicknair, Louisiana Board Certified Estate Planning and Administration Specialist, Louisiana Board Certified Tax Law Specialist, and Louisiana CPA to learn more about estate planning in Louisiana, incapacity planning, and Louisiana asset protection.

If you liked this article, “Medicaid Crisis Plans for Long Term Care Costs” read also these additional articles: Is Now a Good Time for a Roth Conversion? and What Does a Funeral Cost These Days? and Will Drinking Milk Prevent Dementia? and What are Mistakes to Avoid with Beneficiary Designations?

Reference: The News-Enterprise (July 23, 2022) “Crisis planning for couples focuses on asset protection”

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What are Mistakes to Avoid with Beneficiary Designations? https://vicknairlawfirm.com/what-are-mistakes-to-avoid-with-beneficiary-designations/ Wed, 10 Aug 2022 04:12:02 +0000 https://vicknairlawfirm.com/?p=11255 What are Mistakes to Avoid with Beneficiary Designations?

Many people don’t know that their will doesn’t control who inherits all of their assets when they die. Some assets pass by beneficiary designation. Assets like life insurance, annuities and retirement accounts all pass by beneficiary designation.

Kiplinger’s recent article entitled “Beneficiary Designations: 5 Critical Mistakes to Avoid” lists five critical mistakes to avoid when dealing with your beneficiary designations:

  1. Failing to designate any beneficiary at all. Many people forget to name a beneficiary for retirement accounts or life insurance. They may forget, didn’t know they had to, or just never got around to filling out the forms. If you don’t name a beneficiary for life insurance or retirement accounts, the company will apply its rules about where the assets will go after you die. For life insurance, the proceeds will typically be paid to your probate estate. For retirement benefits, if you’re married, your spouse will most likely receive the assets. However, if you’re unmarried, the retirement account will likely be paid to your probate estate, which can have negative asset protection ramifications.
  2. Failing to consider special circumstances. Not every family member should get an asset directly. This includes minor children, those with specials needs and people who can’t manage assets or with creditor issues.  Unless you trust the parent(s) of the minor child, consider leaving that child’s share of the asset to a trust for the child and not to the child directly.
  3. Misspelling a beneficiary’s name. Beneficiary designation forms can be filled out incorrectly and the beneficiary designation form may not be specific. People also change their names through marriage or divorce, or assumptions can be made about a person’s legal name that later prove incorrect. Failing to have names match exactly can cause delays in payouts, and in a worst-case scenario of two people with similar names, it can result in a court case.
  4. Forgetting to update your beneficiaries. Your choice of beneficiary may likely change over time as circumstances change. Naming a beneficiary is part of an overall estate plan, and just as life changes, so should your estate plan. Beneficiary designations are an important part of that plan—make certain that they’re updated regularly.
  5. Failing to review beneficiary choices with legal and financial advisers. How beneficiary designations should be completed is a component of an overall financial and estate plan. Involve your legal and financial advisers to determine what’s best for your circumstances. Note that beneficiary designations are designed to guarantee that you have the ultimate say over who will get your assets when you pass away. Taking the time to carefully (and correctly) choose your beneficiaries and then periodically reviewing those choices and making any necessary updates will allow you to remain in control of your money.

BOOK A CALL with me, Ted Vicknair, Louisiana Board Certified Estate Planning and Administration Specialist, Louisiana Board Certified Tax Law Specialist, and Louisiana CPA to learn more about estate planning in Louisiana, incapacity planning, and Louisiana asset protection.

If you liked this article, “What are Mistakes to Avoid with Beneficiary Designations?” read also these additional articles: Are Testamentary Trusts a Good Idea? and IRS Extends Time to File Portability Exemption Relief to Five Years and Can I Use a Special Needs Trust? and How to Plan in a Time of Uncertainty

Reference: Kiplinger (June 6, 2022) “Beneficiary Designations: 5 Critical Mistakes to Avoid”

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Are Testamentary Trusts a Good Idea? https://vicknairlawfirm.com/are-testamentary-trusts-a-good-idea/ Wed, 10 Aug 2022 04:04:42 +0000 https://vicknairlawfirm.com/?p=11254 Are Testamentary Trusts a Good Idea?

Not everyone wants to leave everything to their heirs without restrictions. Some want to protect money inherited from their own parents for their children or want to keep an irresponsible child from squandering an inheritance. For people who want more control over their assets, a testamentary trust might be useful, according to the recent article “What Is a Testamentary Trust and How Do I Create One? from U.S. News & World Report. A testamentary trust can also be used to leave assets to minor children, who may not legally inherit wealth directly.

However, your estate planning attorney may have some other, better tools for you.

A testamentary trust is a trust created to hold assets created in a last will and testament. It does not become active until after a person dies and the will has been validated by probate court. Once this has happened, the trust is activated and the decedent’s assets are placed into the trust. At this point, the trustee is in charge of the trust’s management and asset distribution.

A testamentary trust is different from a living trust. The living trust, also known as an inter vivos trust, is created while the settlor (the person making the trust) is still living. When the person dies, the trust doesn’t go through probate and assets are distributed according to the directions in the trust.

Both testamentary and living are used in estate planning. However, the living trust may have far more flexibility and be easier to manage for a very simple reason: testamentary trusts are part of the probate process, administered through probate for as long as they are in effect.

There are advantages and disadvantages to both kinds of trusts. The testamentary trust is often used to manage assets for minor children. It’s also a good tool if you’re worried about an adult child getting divorced and keeping the family money in the family. The long-term court oversight is more protective, which may be desirable, but it can also be more expensive.

The best reason for a testamentary estate? When someone involved in the person’s estate loves to get tangled up in litigation. Having to deal with probate court in addition to civil court might make a litigious family member a little less likely to bring a lawsuit.

Your will must contain specific directions for what assets go into the testamentary trust. Assets with beneficiary designations, such as life insurance policies and retirement accounts, don’t go into any trusts, unless a trust is designated as the beneficiary of the policy or account. They are instead distributed directly to beneficiaries outside of the probate estate.

Changing or annulling a testamentary trust is relatively easy while you are living—simply update your will to reflect your new wishes.  However, once you have passed, the testamentary trust becomes irrevocable and may not be changed.

Which is best for your situation? Your estate planning attorney will evaluate these and other estate planning tools to find the best solutions to protect you and your family.

BOOK A CALL with me, Ted Vicknair, Louisiana Board Certified Estate Planning and Administration Specialist, Louisiana Board Certified Tax Law Specialist, and Louisiana CPA to learn more about estate planning in Louisiana, incapacity planning, and Louisiana asset protection.

If you liked this article, “Are Testamentary Trusts a Good Idea?” read also these additional articles: IRS Extends Time to File Portability Exemption Relief to Five Years and Can I Use a Special Needs Trust? and How to Plan in a Time of Uncertainty and Can You Leave an IRA to a Beneficiary?

Reference: U.S. News & World Report (July 14, 2022) “What Is a Testamentary Trust and How Do I Create One?

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