What Is Estate Planning?
Estate planning is the process of arranging for the management and distribution of your assets during your lifetime and after your death. It involves creating legal documents that specify who receives your property, who makes financial and medical decisions on your behalf if you become incapacitated, and how your wealth is transferred to the next generation with minimal tax consequences and legal complications.
Many people assume estate planning is only for the wealthy, but this is a misconception. Anyone who owns assets, whether a retirement account, a home, life insurance, or even a bank account, benefits from having an estate plan. Without one, state laws (called intestacy laws) determine how your assets are distributed, which may not align with your wishes. Courts may appoint guardians for your minor children, and your family may face a lengthy and expensive probate process.
For investors specifically, estate planning is critical because investment accounts, brokerage holdings, and retirement funds each have unique rules governing how they transfer upon death. A well-constructed estate plan ensures that your portfolio, which you spent years building, reaches the intended beneficiaries efficiently and with the least possible tax burden.
Key Estate Planning Documents
A comprehensive estate plan typically consists of several core legal documents. Each serves a distinct purpose, and together they provide complete coverage for various scenarios.
Last Will and Testament
A will is a legal document that specifies how you want your assets distributed after your death. It names an executor (the person responsible for carrying out your wishes), designates guardians for minor children, and can include specific bequests such as leaving particular items or sums of money to specific individuals or organizations. A will only takes effect upon death and must go through probate, the court-supervised process of validating the will and distributing assets.
Without a will, you die "intestate," meaning your state's default rules determine who inherits your property. In most states, assets pass to your spouse and children according to a fixed formula, but unmarried partners, stepchildren, friends, and charities receive nothing under intestacy laws.
Revocable Living Trust
A revocable living trust is a legal entity that holds your assets during your lifetime and transfers them to your beneficiaries upon your death without going through probate. You serve as both the trustee (manager) and beneficiary during your lifetime, maintaining full control over the assets. You can modify or revoke the trust at any time. Upon your death, a successor trustee you have named takes over and distributes assets according to the trust's terms.
The primary advantage of a revocable living trust over a will is probate avoidance. Probate can take six months to two years and costs 2% to 7% of the estate's value in fees. A trust also provides privacy, since wills become public records during probate while trusts remain private.
Durable Power of Attorney
A durable power of attorney (POA) authorizes someone you trust (your "agent" or "attorney-in-fact") to manage your financial affairs if you become incapacitated. This includes paying bills, managing investments, filing taxes, and handling real estate transactions. The word "durable" means the authority continues even if you become mentally incapacitated, which is precisely when you need it most.
Without a durable POA, your family would need to petition a court for guardianship or conservatorship to manage your finances, a process that is time-consuming, expensive, and public. For investors, having a POA ensures that someone you trust can manage your portfolio, rebalance accounts, and take required minimum distributions from retirement accounts if you are unable to do so yourself.
Advance Healthcare Directive
An advance healthcare directive (also called a living will or healthcare power of attorney) communicates your medical treatment preferences if you cannot speak for yourself. It typically includes two components: a living will that specifies what medical treatments you do or do not want (such as life support, resuscitation, or feeding tubes), and a healthcare proxy that names someone to make medical decisions on your behalf.
This document is separate from your financial estate plan but is an essential component of comprehensive planning. Without it, family members may disagree about your care, potentially leading to costly and emotionally painful legal disputes.
Types of Trusts
Trusts are versatile estate planning tools that can accomplish a wide range of goals beyond simple asset distribution. The two broadest categories are revocable and irrevocable trusts, each with distinct advantages and trade-offs.
| Feature | Revocable Trust | Irrevocable Trust |
|---|---|---|
| Can Be Modified | Yes, at any time during your lifetime | Generally no, once established |
| Probate Avoidance | Yes | Yes |
| Estate Tax Protection | No, assets still counted in your estate | Yes, assets removed from your taxable estate |
| Creditor Protection | No, creditors can reach trust assets | Yes, generally protected from creditors |
| Control Over Assets | Full control as trustee | Limited or no control after transfer |
| Income Tax Treatment | Reported on your personal return | Trust files its own tax return |
| Setup Complexity | Moderate | High, requires careful planning |
| Best For | Probate avoidance, incapacity planning | Estate tax reduction, asset protection, Medicaid planning |
Beyond these two broad categories, there are many specialized trust types. Charitable remainder trusts allow you to donate assets to charity while receiving income during your lifetime. Special needs trusts provide for a disabled beneficiary without disqualifying them from government benefits. Spendthrift trusts protect assets from beneficiaries who may not manage money responsibly. Each serves a specific purpose and should be established with guidance from an estate planning attorney.
Beneficiary Designations
Beneficiary designations are instructions attached to specific accounts that dictate who receives those assets upon your death. They are found on retirement accounts (401(k)s, IRAs, 403(b)s), life insurance policies, annuities, health savings accounts (HSAs), and transfer-on-death (TOD) brokerage accounts.
Here is the critical point that many investors miss: beneficiary designations override your will and trust. If your will says your daughter inherits everything but your IRA beneficiary form still names your ex-spouse, your ex-spouse receives the IRA. This makes reviewing and updating beneficiary designations one of the most important, yet most frequently overlooked, aspects of estate planning.
Common Beneficiary Mistakes to Avoid
Review your beneficiary designations after any major life event: marriage, divorce, birth of a child, or the death of a named beneficiary. Also name contingent (secondary) beneficiaries in case your primary beneficiary predeceases you. Failing to name a beneficiary means the account may go through probate, defeating the purpose of the designation.
For retirement accounts specifically, the SECURE Act of 2019 changed the rules for inherited IRAs. Most non-spouse beneficiaries must now withdraw all funds within 10 years of the original owner's death, rather than stretching distributions over their lifetime. This has significant tax planning implications, making the choice of beneficiary and the type of retirement account (traditional vs. Roth) an important estate planning consideration.
Estate Tax Basics
The federal estate tax is a tax on the transfer of property at death. However, due to the high exemption threshold, it affects a very small percentage of estates. Understanding the current exemption and how it may change helps investors plan appropriately.
| Estate Tax Feature | Current Law (2024-2025) | Scheduled 2026 Change |
|---|---|---|
| Federal Exemption (Individual) | $13.61 million (2024) | Expected to drop to approximately $7 million (adjusted for inflation) |
| Federal Exemption (Married Couple) | $27.22 million (2024) | Expected to drop to approximately $14 million |
| Top Federal Tax Rate | 40% | 40% |
| Portability | Yes, unused exemption transfers to surviving spouse | Expected to continue |
| Annual Gift Tax Exclusion | $18,000 per recipient (2024) | Adjusted annually for inflation |
| Step-Up in Basis at Death | Yes, heirs receive assets at fair market value | Expected to continue |
The step-up in basis is one of the most powerful estate planning benefits for investors. When you die, your heirs receive your investments at their current fair market value rather than your original purchase price. If you bought stock for $10,000 that is worth $100,000 at your death, your heirs' cost basis is $100,000. If they sell immediately, they owe zero capital gains tax on the $90,000 of appreciation. This makes holding appreciated assets until death a legitimate tax strategy, though it should be balanced against other investment considerations.
In addition to federal estate taxes, some states impose their own estate or inheritance taxes with lower exemption thresholds. As of 2024, 12 states and the District of Columbia levy an estate tax, and 6 states impose an inheritance tax. Maryland is the only state with both. State exemptions can be as low as $1 million, meaning state estate tax planning is relevant for many more families than federal planning.
The Probate Process
Probate is the court-supervised legal process of validating a will, paying debts and taxes, and distributing assets to beneficiaries. While probate ensures that the process is conducted properly and protects creditors' rights, it has several significant drawbacks for families.
The probate process typically involves these steps: filing the will with the probate court, appointing an executor, inventorying and appraising assets, notifying creditors and paying valid claims, filing final tax returns, and distributing remaining assets to beneficiaries. The timeline varies by state and the complexity of the estate but commonly takes six months to two years.
The costs of probate include court filing fees, executor compensation (often 2% to 5% of the estate value), attorney fees, appraiser fees, and accounting fees. In total, probate typically costs 2% to 7% of the estate's value. For a $500,000 estate, that could mean $10,000 to $35,000 in fees that reduce what your beneficiaries receive.
Assets that avoid probate include those held in a trust, accounts with beneficiary designations (retirement accounts, life insurance, TOD accounts), jointly held property with right of survivorship, and community property with right of survivorship in applicable states. A well-designed estate plan often aims to pass as many assets as possible outside of probate.
Common Estate Planning Mistakes
Even well-intentioned investors make estate planning errors that can create significant problems for their families. Being aware of these common mistakes helps you avoid them.
- Not having an estate plan at all. This is the most common and costly mistake. Without a will or trust, state intestacy laws control everything, courts choose guardians for your children, and the probate process is more expensive and time-consuming.
- Failing to update documents after life changes. Marriage, divorce, births, deaths, and significant changes in wealth all require updates to your estate plan. A will written 15 years ago may not reflect your current family situation or financial picture.
- Ignoring beneficiary designations. As noted above, beneficiary designations override your will. Many people update their will but forget to update beneficiary forms on retirement accounts and life insurance policies, leading to unintended distributions.
- Not funding a trust. Creating a trust document is only the first step. You must also retitle assets into the trust's name for it to be effective. An unfunded trust does not avoid probate because the assets are not in it. This is one of the most common estate planning failures.
- Choosing the wrong executor or trustee. Your executor or trustee should be someone who is organized, responsible, and capable of handling financial matters. Choosing someone based solely on family relationship rather than competence can lead to mismanagement, delays, and family conflict.
- Not planning for incapacity. Many people focus only on what happens after death and neglect planning for what happens if they become unable to manage their own affairs. A durable power of attorney and healthcare directive are essential for this scenario.
- DIY estate planning without professional review. While online templates can be a starting point, estate planning involves state-specific laws, tax implications, and complex interactions between different documents. Having an estate planning attorney review your plan helps ensure it is legally valid and accomplishes your goals.
- Not considering taxes on inherited retirement accounts. Leaving a large traditional IRA to a beneficiary who is in a high tax bracket can result in a significant tax bill. Converting some traditional IRA funds to a Roth IRA before death, or using other strategies, may reduce the overall tax burden on your heirs.
Estate Planning Checklist for Investors
At minimum, every investor should have a will (or trust), durable power of attorney, healthcare directive, and up-to-date beneficiary designations on all accounts. Review these documents every three to five years or after any major life event. Consider consulting an estate planning attorney, especially if your estate exceeds your state's estate tax threshold or you have complex family or financial situations.