Archive for the Estates Category

How can you keep your assets secure and tax-free?

Keeping your assets safe from creditors and the government has become progressively more difficult since 9/11. Under the pretext of countering terrorism, governments and their tax authorities have aggressively targeted offshore havens and made an effort to link offshore banks with money-laundering and serious criminal activity. The OECD published an offshore blacklist of countries that they consider ‘un-cooperative’ in the collection of taxes and is planning to issue a new report sometime in 2009. Many jurisdictions no longer offer the same protection they once did, and some have gone as far as to say that it is no longer possible to benefit from offshore structures.

While you should certainly exercise caution, there are still methods of practicing legal tax avoidance while keeping maximum privacy. Offshore does not necessarily have to mean a ‘tax-haven’, and some of the best structures are to be found are in traditionally high-tax countries. One of the best ways of maintaining your privacy while still having control over your money is by placing it in an offshore trust.

Here we take a look at why and how offshore trusts are used.

Why put your money in an offshore trust?

1. Asset Protection. If you truly want make sure that no one can get to your nest-egg it’s always good to distance yourself from your assets. Offshore trusts do exactly that by removing the burden of legal ownership, while keeping you in a position of control.

2. Privacy. Trusts are good alternatives to wills because the terms of a trust are private. Not everyone wants their financial status to be public knowledge. Privacy also goes hand in hand with asset protection and keeping your taxes to a minimum.

3. Estate Planning. Offshore trusts are often used for estate p (more…)

When it comes to estate planning, Seattle and its surrounding communities offer a number of support networks that are either free or specifically for seniors and retired individuals. To find out more about each, keep reading.

Senior Rights Assistance of Seattle

The Senior Rights Assistance of Seattle (SRAS) has a great program where they match seniors with retired estate planners, accountants, lawyers and financial advisors to help them with their estate planning and financial goals. To participate in the program, you must first set up an appointment. You can do so by calling 206-448-5720.

Their offices are open Monday to Thursday (9:30 am to 3:30 pm). In addition to providing the services mentioned above, they can also help link up seniors with senior-friendly and recommended attorneys, estate planning companies and accountants.

The EPC (Estate Planning Council) of Seattle

The Estate Planning Council (EPC) is a national trade association with an active Seattle branch. Their membership is comprised of estate planners, attorneys, financial advisors, trust officers, chartered accountants, funeral directors and insurance brokers. Each of their members is focused on providing sound advice and services related to estate planning, advance directives, wills and more.

You can visit the Estate Planning Council of Seattle website online at epcseattle.org. From there, you can access a full list of their membership alongside piles of free information resources.

Understanding Social Security

Though Social Security benefits are a federal prerogative, it’s still a critical part of planning your estate. You should have a full understanding not only of your own Social Security benefits, but also those of your spouse and what will happen to your benefits when you pass.

For help with your Social Security benefits, t (more…)

If you are wisely attempting to put some assets into a trust (inter vivos) in your lifetime, then you have been paying attention to the important differences between wills and trusts. A trust created during your life will be far more secure with respect to its ability to withstand challenges to how your assets are to be distributed during estate planning than a will. Making a trust is a brave thing to do, because it telegraphs, to a certain extent, what you are going to do with your assets while you are still alive. This is what insulates it from attacks on your capacity, because it is unlikely, for example that, one of your relations is going to say you are insane or feeble and unduly influenced by another of your relatives to your face and this makes the trust a far surer bet than a will, in some cases.

However, the trust also may engender hard feels regarding the exclusion of a relative and those feelings will become known to a person creating a trust while they are still alive. This is the advantage of a will — if people don’t like it, you will never know. The will maker is long gone when those that don’t like what they have done contest the will and those that do like it try to defend it. Although, it should be noted that clever drafting should be able to alleviate the necessity of either a contest or a defense. That is why you need a clever estate planning attorney to create your will rather than just a form. The attorney that creates your will often defends its contents, or in other words, their understanding of your wishes. The trust is a different story, because your trust will be administered by someone (called the trustee) for the purpose of those that the trust benefits (the beneficiaries).

One of the paramount problems of forming a trust is deciding what powers the trustee has and what powers they do not have relative to the (more…)