Shownotes
Legal documents help you grow and protect your wealth, establish family decision-making, and successfully transfer your property to the next generation without unnecessary loss or stress.
Illness or advanced old age may render you unable to manage your health and finances alone. In such a case, medical providers require the following legal documents:
Health Care Power-of-Attorney
HIPPA-compliant medical records release
Advance Directive
Financial Institutions require a Financial Power of Attorney.
When you pass, the property you once owned will transfer to your loved ones by one of the following methods:
Last Will and Testament
Revocable Trust
Transfer on Death Deed
Beneficiary Designation
If you are married, the only way to leave your property to your spouse and protect it from Medicaid spend-down and liens if they become ill is by funding a Spousal Protection Trust. Authorized by federal law, this trust also captures any estate tax credit afforded your estate. The following states have a death tax:
Connecticut
District of Columbia
Hawaii
Illinois
Maine
Maryland
Massachusetts
Minnesota
New York
Oregon
Rhode Island
Vermont
Washington
Federal law requires that a Will creates a Spousal Protection Trust. If you are married and wish to avail yourself of the most powerful asset protection trust in American jurisprudence, you must have a Will. Avoid living trusts or transfer-on-death deeds.