Description
- Clarify your estate-planning goals, such as dividing up property for heirs, reducing taxes or leaving money for charity
- Understand the key estate-planning documents you'll need, including wills, beneficiary-designation forms, powers-of-attorney and health-care advance directives
- Decode the technical jargon that estate planners often use, so you feel comfortable discussing QTIPs and QPRTs when you sit down with your lawyer.
- Reduce possible estate, gift or generation-skipping taxes and legal and probate fees - decreasing what goes to the tax man and increasing what goes to your heirs
- Learn strategies to divide money and personal property among your heirs, and reduce the possibility of family fights
- Discuss sensitive estate-planning issues with your family
- Maintain your estate-plan over time, including how to store and when to update your documents With completely up-to-date information on how to navigate the new 2011 estate tax legislation, and thoughtful advice on how to handle your estate in complicated situations - like if you're single, in a same-sex relationship, or wish to provide for children with special needs - this is the estae-planning guide for today's messy and complicated world. One of the biggest estate planning mistakes people make, says Silverman, is waiting too long to start. Which is why the Wall Street Journal Complete Estate-Planning Guidebook isn't just for those planning for retirement or their golden years. It's for anyone, of any age, who wants the peace of mind of knowing that your wishes will be respected and your hard-earned money will get passed on as you would like.
Author: Rachel Emma Silverman
Publisher: Crown Currency
Published: 09/06/2011
Pages: 208
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.63lbs
Size: 9.27h x 5.35w x 0.62d
ISBN13: 9780307461278
ISBN10: 0307461270
BISAC Categories:
- Business & Economics | Personal Finance | General
- Reference | Personal & Practical Guides
- Business & Economics | Insurance | Life
About the Author
Rachel Emma Silverman is an editor and reporter at the Wall Street Journal, where she has worked since 1998. She currently edits and co-writes The Juggle, the Wall Street Journal's work-and-family website and reports on career, workplace and family issues. Before that, she covered personal finance, focusing on estate planning, wealth management, insurance, philanthropy, art and collectibles, and financial aspects of marriage and divorce. She graduated summa cum laude from Harvard University and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. She now lives in Austin, TX with her husband and two young sons.

