Preparing
for Your Initial Consultation
You should receive a
Welcome Kit from our office prior to your initial consultation. Included
in this Kit is a short questionnaire designed to help focus your thoughts
on the planning process, and to help us gather important facts. Please
take the time to review these documents. If at all possible, we would like
to review your completed questionnaire two days prior to the meeting. If
this is not possible, please bring it with you to your appointment.
In the case of a married
couple, it is important to schedule an appointment at a time when both of
you are available to meet. While our first meeting may not last more than
an hour, I want to leave plenty of time to answer all of your questions,
and develop the information we would need to plan your estate.
If you need to reschedule
your appointment, please contact us immediately so that we may rearrange
our schedule and perhaps make an appointment more convenient for another
of our clients.
While it would be helpful,
there is no need to go on a "treasure hunt" at this point for
financial or legal documents, stock certificates or insurance policies.
Sometimes we find clients procrastinate in getting their planning done
because they cannot locate, or do not have time to locate, all of these
documents. Truthfully, these documents will not be needed until we begin
the funding process ... which is one of the last steps in the process!
Instead, spend the time before your appointment contemplating the Three
P's of Estate Planning (see below).
If
You Need a Nevada Elder Law Consultation
First time appointments
for estate planning are complimentary. If you anticipate that you or
another family member requires immediate Medicaid planning or related
special needs planning, we ask you to complete a comprehensive asset
inventory, we schedule a longer appointment, and we do charge for the
initial elder law conference. During this meeting, we are generally able
to offer specific recommendations to be implemented by our firm, by
another firm, or by your family. Feel free to discuss this with the
attorney in advance of the elder law consultation.
Understanding
the Three P's of Estate Planning
#1 --
People
Who are the Important People in your life?
Beginning with yourself, they also likely include your loved ones: your spouse if you are
married, children and grandchildren if you have any, perhaps your parents, siblings or
other relatives. Beyond these, however, "Important People" also could include
charities, special causes, colleges or universities, or churches to which you are
committed. For some, "Important People" could even include pets. Spend some time
thinking about the impact others have had on your life. Make a list and jot notes if you
like. This is where the planning process truly begins.
#2 --
Property
By Property we mean your assets in general.
Make a list of the assets you own or control. At this point, you do not need to identify
insurance policy numbers and exact dollar values. Rather think through your assets in
terms of their nature (cash, stocks, bonds, real estate, etc.); their value in thousands
of dollars; and your ownership interest. Do you own assets in your name only, in joint
tenancy with someone else, or through a trust agreement or some other arrangement? Be sure
to include often-overlooked assets like life insurance (the death benefit, not the cash
value), business interests, and any inheritance you may expect to receive.
#3 --
Plans
After identifying the Important People in your life and your Property, the next step is to
consider the plans you would make for those people (including yourself) and that Property
in the event of your own incapacity or death.
Who would you name to make decisions for you if you could no longer do so yourself? Would
the same person handle your finances and your personal and health care decisions? Who
would care for your minor children? How would you distribute your assets to your heirs?
would you prefer to spare your heirs the cost and hassles of the probate process? Would
you like to minimize the impact of estate taxes ... or maximize the impact of a charitable
bequest? Is there someone in your family with special needs for whom you would like to
provide? Is there someone who perhaps should not receive a great deal of money without
some outside oversight?
These are just a few of
the issues to consider when approaching the planning process. They are much more important
than the "treasure hunt" for legal documents at this stage.
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