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Can You Get Around Probate?

Can You Get Around Probate?
If I knew then what I know now about probate, I’d have done more to avoid the process altogether with my mother’s estate.

As any of our estate planning attorneys from Beck, Lenox & Stolzer will tell you, probate takes time, costs money and adds stress to settling a loved one’s estate. A reporter shares her personal experience in a recent article appearing in Market Watch, Inheritance isn’t automatic: The probate process can take almost two years and cost thousands of dollars.”  Can you get around probate?

Most people have a vague notion of what probate is. They understand it to be a process where the family must file the will with the county court and wait for it to be approved before distributing assets. If there’s no will, they may think probate is the process of settling the estate.

Others think inheritance happens automatically, with heirs receiving 35% of an estate. This is not true. One of the easiest ways for assets to go to heirs outside of probate is to make the most of beneficiary designations. Certain financial accounts offer the option to assign someone as a beneficiary, usually investment, retirement and bank accounts. After the account owner dies, the heirs apply for their inheritance with a death certificate and proof of their identity.

A recent study showed that only 2% of people understood that the average period of time to probate an estate is 20 months. While there are some jurisdictions where probate happens more efficiently, most estates take a long time to go through the process.

How can you avoid probate or simplify your estate so fewer assets go through probate? Your estate planning attorney will be able to explain how using trusts takes assets out of the estate. Another is simplifying your life. If you have assets with multiple investment companies, for instance, consolidating them into one account with one financial institution could streamline the process for your heirs.

While you’re consolidating your accounts, check on your beneficiary designations. If you opened an investment account twenty years ago, you may have named someone who isn’t in your life anymore. They may be happy to receive a surprise inheritance from you. However, your family won’t be able to get the assets, even if your will says otherwise.

For an excellent example of how to manage an estate, consider the actor Matthew Perry. Most of his estate was transferred to heirs through trusts, which avoided large assets going through probate and kept his personal business private. One bank account had no named beneficiaries, so his family went to probate court to file his “pour-over will.” This is a will where assets not already in trust are directed to be added to the trust after death. Because the will was filed in court, reporters were able to obtain information about this one account. The rest was private.

Consult with your estate planning attorney to determine how to structure your estate best to avoid or minimize probate for your loved ones. Current clients with Beck, Lenox & Stolzer may call our office to schedule a review of their estate plan. Prospective clients can click here to schedule a complimentary phone consultation with attorney Jayson Lenox or attorney Caroline Daiker Stolzer.

Reference: Market Watch (July 17, 2024) “Inheritance isn’t automatic: The probate process can take almost two years and cost thousands of dollars”

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