
Welcome to the Blog
Keep up with the latest news and updates
You probably assume that if something happened to you, the other parent would step in and everything would work itself out.
In many families, that's true. But not always.
Real life is messy. Parents separate. Relationships become contentious. Custody disputes drag on for years. And when a tragedy occurs in the middle of all of that, children can end up in legal limbo while adults and courts scramble to figure out what happens next. A recent Michigan case shows exactly how complicated things can get. It also reveals a gap in estate planning that most parents never see coming and that a basic will simply cannot fill.
When a Parent Dies, the Answer Isn't Always Obvious
The Michigan case titled Sartor v. Johnson involved a child whose parents, Dwight and Renee, had been locked in years of contentious custody litigation. Over time, the court repeatedly restricted Renee's parenting time due to concerns about alcohol use, anger issues, and mental health struggles. Eventually, Dwight was awarded sole legal and physical custody, and Renee was limited to supervised visits.
In 2023, relatives temporarily obtained guardianship of the child after Dwight left town, and concerns arose about the child's medical care. Shortly afterward, that guardianship ended, and the child returned to Dwight's care. Then Dwight died.
At that point, Renee, who had not seen the child in more than two years, sought full legal and physical custody.
Under Michigan law, as in most states, custody goes to the surviving parent when one parent dies. But if being with that parent would not serve the child's best interests, then someone else can gain custody. After hearing testimony from relatives and reviewing the circumstances, the court determined that placing the child with the mother was not in the child's best interests. Instead, custody was awarded to the child's paternal aunt and uncle, a decision that was upheld on appeal.
The bottom line: Even when the law creates a presumption in favor of the surviving parent, courts still weigh the evidence and decide what actually serves the child. A good outcome is not guaranteed without documentation to support it.
That legal battle, though, was only part of the problem. There was also a more immediate issue that could affect any parent in any family situation.
The First 24 Hours: Who Has the Legal Authority to Help Your Child?
In the Michigan case, the child had a chronic medical condition that required regular medication and IV infusions every four to six weeks. When Dwight left town, and relatives stepped in, they had to go through the court to obtain guardianship just to have the legal authority to make medical decisions.
Think about what that means in practice.
If something happened to you today, a car accident, a sudden medical event, even a short stretch of incapacitation, who has the legal authority to take care of your child right now? Not in a week, after court filings are processed. Right now.
Without planning, the answer may be no one. Even the most trusted relative may not be able to:
- Consent to medical treatment
- Access your child's medical records
- Enroll your child in school
- Make routine but necessary day-to-day decisions
In some cases, children have been placed temporarily with strangers through child protective services while courts sorted out who had legal authority to act. Emergency guardianship proceedings, even when things move quickly, can take anywhere from several days to several weeks. During that time, your child's medical care, schooling, and daily needs are in limbo.
Traditional estate plans don't address this gap. Naming a guardian in a will only takes effect after a probate court process that can take weeks or months. It does nothing to help in the hours and days immediately after an emergency.
The bottom line: The gap between "something just happened" and "the court has authorized someone to help" can stretch for weeks. Your child shouldn't have to wait in uncertainty during that time.
This is exactly the problem a Kids Protection Plan is designed to solve. Let's look at what that means.
The Plan Most Parents Don't Know They Need
A Kids Protection Plan is a comprehensive plan specifically designed to address the immediate, real-world situations that arise when a parent becomes unavailable. It goes well beyond naming a guardian in a will.
With a Kids Protection Plan, you can:
- Name both short-term and long-term guardians for your children
- Give trusted caregivers immediate legal authority to act, without waiting for a court
- Prevent your child from being placed with strangers or anyone you wouldn't choose
- Ensure medical care and daily needs can be handled without delay
The bottom line: A will names a guardian for the future. A Kids Protection Plan protects your child right now, in the first hours of an emergency, before any court gets involved. This ensures as much stability for your child as possible, preventing them from being taken into the care of strangers.
But the Michigan case also highlights one more element of this plan that is equally important.
What if the Other Parent is the Person You’re Worried About?
The deceased father in this case had spent years documenting concerns about the mother through court proceedings. That evidence ultimately helped persuade the court that placing the child with relatives was in the child's best interests.
Most parents aren't that fortunate. Most parents haven't spent years in litigation creating a documented record. And without that record, a court may have very little to work with when deciding who should raise your child.
A confidential guardian exclusion affidavit, included as part of a Kids Protection Plan, allows you to put your concerns in writing now, while you are here to explain them. This document is not public. It stays private with your planning documents and only becomes relevant if a court must determine who should care for your child.
In it, you can explain:
- Why certain individuals should not serve as guardians
- The history and context that a judge would need to understand
- Any specific concerns or evidence that supports your position
Without something like this, your perspective simply isn't part of the record.
The bottom line: If you have concerns about who might seek custody of your child, the time to document them is now, not after a crisis makes it too late.
Why the Right Plan Protects More Than You Think
The Michigan case is a powerful reminder that legal assumptions don't always match real life. Even when the law leans a certain direction, courts still have to evaluate what actually serves a child's best interests, and that process can take time, involve competing voices, and produce real uncertainty.
Without planning, families face:
- Legal battles among relatives who all care but disagree
- Delays of days or weeks in getting medical care or handling basic needs
- Confusion about who has the authority to act
- A child navigating an already-difficult loss while adults sort out the logistics
With the right plan in place, those risks shrink dramatically. Your child's care follows your wishes. Trusted caregivers can act immediately. And the people you would not choose are clearly excluded.
The bottom line: The right planning doesn't just protect your child long-term. It eliminates the chaos, delay, and uncertainty that can harm a child in the days immediately after a crisis.
What You Can Do Right Now
Your child deserves protection that works from the very first moment of an emergency, not just eventually, after a court has had time to catch up. At Law Mother, we help you create an estate plan that includes a Kids Protection Plan designed to protect your child right now and ensure your wishes guide what happens if you are ever not there. We don't create one-size-fits-all documents. We take the time to understand your family's specific situation and design a plan that actually works when your loved ones need it to.
Schedule a complimentary 15-minute discovery call, and let's find out where you stand: lawmother.com/go
This material was created for educational and informational purposes only and is not intended as ERISA, tax, legal, or investment advice. If you are seeking legal advice specific to your needs, such advice services must be obtained on your own, separate from this educational material.

One Death, One Courtroom, One Child - and a Lesson Every Parent Needs to Hear
You and your partner have built something real together. Maybe you share a home, split the bills, and have been each other's go-to person for years. In every way that matters, you're family.
The problem is, the law doesn't see it that way.
Without a marriage certificate, your partner has almost no automatic legal standing when it comes to your health care, your finances, or your estate. That gap doesn't just create paperwork headaches. It can leave the person you love most completely powerless at the worst possible moment.
In this article, I'll walk you through why unmarried couples face unique legal exposure, how specific assets can quietly work against you, and what a real plan looks like when it's built around your actual life.
The Legal Status Your Partner Doesn't Have (And What That Costs You)
Marriage creates an automatic legal framework. Spouses have default rights to make medical decisions, access financial accounts, and inherit property. Unmarried partners get none of that by default, no matter how long you've been together.
Even if you've shared a life for 20 years, the law treats your partner essentially as a legal stranger.
That distinction has serious real-world consequences:
- Medical decisions get taken out of your partner's hands. If you're incapacitated due to illness or injury, your partner may not have the legal authority to make decisions about your care. That authority defaults to biological relatives - parents, siblings, adult children - even if you've been estranged from them for years.
- Hospitals can shut your partner out. Without the right legal documents in place, your partner could be barred from your room, excluded from conversations with your doctors, and left in the dark about your condition.
- Your assets could go to people you'd never choose. If you die without a plan, state law determines who inherits your estate. In most states, an unmarried partner inherits nothing. Your property passes to blood relatives - even if that's the last outcome you would have wanted.
- Family conflict becomes more likely. When your relationship isn't legally recognized, relatives who disapprove of your partner have more room to challenge or interfere. Unclear intentions invite disputes.
The bottom line: the person you trust most could end up with no authority, no access, and no inheritance - all because the law never recognized your commitment.
Understanding this is where protection begins. But there's another layer to this problem that most couples don't think about until it's too late.
The Assets That Could Quietly Betray Your Partner
Many couples assume that living together or sharing expenses creates some kind of legal protection. It doesn't. What actually matters is how each asset is owned - and for unmarried couples, the details are everything.
Here are some common situations where things can go wrong fast:
- Your home. If the house is titled in one partner's name only, the surviving partner may have no legal right to remain there after the owner dies. The property passes according to the deceased partner's estate, which, without a plan, likely means it goes to relatives who may choose to sell it.
- Your bank accounts. An account that isn't jointly owned or set up as payable-on-death to your partner could be inaccessible after your death. Your partner might not be able to pay the mortgage, the utilities, or even basic living expenses while the estate is being settled.
- Your retirement accounts and life insurance. These assets don't follow a will - they follow beneficiary designations, meaning whatever form you filled out years ago controls where the money goes. An outdated or incomplete designation can send those assets to someone other than your partner.
- Your personal property. Items with sentimental or financial value - jewelry, artwork, vehicles, collections - can become flashpoints for conflict when your wishes were never clearly documented.
None of this happens because couples have bad intentions. Most people simply assume things will work themselves out because their commitment is obvious to everyone around them. But the legal system doesn't run on assumptions, and the gaps it leaves can be devastating.
The bottom line: How your assets are titled and whose name is on your accounts matters far more than how long you've been together. Without a plan that addresses each of these pieces, your partner is vulnerable.
That's exactly why proactive planning matters so much for unmarried couples, and why a generic set of documents won't cut it.
The "Common Law Marriage" Myth That Catches Couples Off Guard
Many people believe that living together long enough automatically creates legal rights, which is often called common law marriage. Here's what you need to know: only a handful of states recognize common law marriage at all, and the requirements are strict even in states where it exists. Simply sharing a home, combining finances, or introducing each other as partners is not enough.
Even in states that do recognize it, common law marriage typically requires both partners to hold themselves out publicly as married, intend to be married, and live together. If there's any ambiguity, it can take a court battle to establish, and that's the last thing your partner needs while grieving.
And if you live in a state that doesn't recognize common law marriage at all? That informal arrangement provides zero legal protection, regardless of how long you've been together or how intertwined your lives are.
The bottom line: Don't count on the law to fill in the blanks. In most places, it simply won't.
This is why deliberate, documented planning isn't optional for unmarried couples. It's essential.
What an Unmarried Couple's Plan Actually Needs to Cover
A real plan for an unmarried couple isn't just a will. It's a coordinated set of documents and decisions that work together to make your intentions legally enforceable. Here's what that looks like in practice:
- A durable financial power of attorney gives your partner the authority to manage your finances, pay your bills, and handle your accounts if you become incapacitated. Without it, they have no legal standing to access anything.
- A health care proxy or medical power of attorney designates your partner as the person authorized to make medical decisions on your behalf. This is the document that keeps hospitals from defaulting to biological family.
- An advance directive or living will documents your wishes for end-of-life care so your partner isn't left guessing and isn't overruled.
- A will or trust that clearly names your partner as a beneficiary ensures your assets go where you actually want them to go, not where state law sends them by default.
- Updated beneficiary designations on retirement accounts and life insurance policies that name your partner directly, so those assets transfer immediately and aren't tied up in probate.
- A title review of jointly used property to make sure how things are owned reflects what you actually intend.
No single document does all of this. And a plan that's missing even one of these pieces can leave your partner exposed in ways you never anticipated.
The bottom line: Protecting an unmarried partner requires a complete, coordinated plan. One document in a drawer isn't enough.
Why Documents Alone Aren't Enough
Having the right documents is essential, but documents alone don't guarantee your plan will work when your family needs it. Plans fail, not because they weren't drafted, but because no one kept them current, no one knew where to find them, or no one was there to guide the family through a crisis.
For unmarried couples, this risk is even higher. There's no legal default to fall back on. If a document is outdated, unsigned, or unfindable, your partner is right back to square one, treated as a legal stranger.
That's why the most important part of any plan isn't a piece of paper. It's having a trusted advisor who keeps your plan updated as your life changes, makes sure your loved ones know exactly what to do and who to call when something happens, and is available to guide your family through it, not just someone who drafted documents and sent you on your way.
The bottom line: A plan that no one can find or follow isn't a plan. The relationship with your attorney is what makes the documents work.
What You Can Do Right Now
If you're in a committed relationship but not legally married, the law will not automatically protect your partner if you become incapacitated or when you die. Without a plan that addresses your specific situation, the person you trust most could be locked out of critical decisions and left with nothing from the life you built together.
At Law Mother, we help unmarried couples create estate plans that close these gaps. We don't create one-size-fits-all documents. We take the time to understand your specific situation and design a plan that actually works when your loved ones need it to.
Schedule a complimentary 15-minute discovery call, and let's find out where you stand: lawmother.com/go
This material was created for educational and informational purposes only and is not intended as ERISA, tax, legal, or investment advice. If you are seeking legal advice specific to your needs, such advice services must be obtained on your own, separate from this educational material.

Estate Planning for Unmarried Couples: Protecting the Person You Love
If you are in a blended family, you may believe the simplest estate plan is the fairest one: "I'll leave everything to my spouse. They'll take care of my kids."
That approach often works in a first and only marriage. If you and your spouse share the same biological or adopted children, the surviving spouse will most often naturally leave everything to your shared children later. But in a blended family, the dynamic is completely different.
In this article, you will learn what normally happens when spouses in blended families leave everything to each other, why children from a first marriage are often accidentally disinherited, how court battles unfold, and what you can do now to protect the people you love from conflict.
Why "I Leave Everything to My Spouse" Feels Right
Most couples in blended families create simple wills that say, "I leave everything to my spouse." They also name each other as beneficiaries on their retirement accounts and life insurance policies. It seems to make sense, right? You trust your spouse. You believe they will "do the right thing." You may even have said, "Of course you'll make sure my kids are taken care of."
There's evidence of this, too. While both of you are alive, the family may get along beautifully. Holidays are shared. Grandchildren visit. There is no visible tension.
But the law does not enforce verbal promises. It enforces ownership.
When you leave assets outright to your spouse - through a will or beneficiary designations - your spouse receives those assets free and clear. There are no legal restrictions. There is no obligation to preserve anything for your children from your prior marriage.
Your spouse now owns everything. And ownership changes everything.
The Pattern That Repeats in Nearly Every Blended Family
Once the surviving spouse owns the assets outright, several predictable things can happen.
Life continues. The surviving spouse may remarry. They may revise their estate plan. They may change beneficiary designations. They may spend assets for retirement, healthcare, or a new lifestyle.
Even without bad intent, the surviving spouse will often prioritize their own biological children. That is human nature. When they eventually die, their estate plan typically leaves everything to their children - not to yours.
At that point, your children from your first marriage often receive nothing. Not because you did not love them. Not because you intended to exclude them. But because the structure of your plan allowed it.
I have seen families who got along famously while both spouses were alive fall apart after the first death. The surviving spouse is blamed for not "sharing." The children feel betrayed. Emotions escalate quickly.
The deceased spouse likely had good intentions and complete trust. But trust is not a legal strategy.
Bottom line: Once assets pass to your surviving spouse outright, your children from a prior marriage have no legal claim - no matter what was promised.
That gap between good intentions and legal reality is exactly where family conflict begins - and it often ends up in court.
When Conflict Moves Into Court
When children from a first marriage are left out, they are often shocked. They believed they would inherit something. They may have had verbal assurances from both spouses and feel betrayed. They may feel the situation is unfair.
Conflict frequently turns into litigation. Here is what that looks like in real life:
- The deceased spouse's children challenge the will.
- They claim that their parent was manipulated by the step-parent, or that their parent lacked the mental capacity to execute the will. These are the main legal options available in this situation.
- The surviving spouse hires legal counsel to defend the estate.
- Tens of thousands - often $50,000 to $100,000 or more - in attorneys' fees and court costs.
- The estate administration is delayed for months or years.
- Family members must take time away from work to attend court hearings, meet with their attorneys, and gather evidence.
- Everyone involved expends enormous mental and emotional energy before and during the court process.
- Once strong family relationships are permanently damaged.
Even after going through all this, judges are generally reluctant to invalidate properly drafted and executed wills. Courts generally assume that if you signed a will, you intended its outcome.
Importantly, some children cannot afford to contest the will at all. Litigation requires money. If the surviving spouse controls the assets, the children from the first marriage may not have the resources to fight, and they must accept that they will receive no inheritance.
The result is predictable: years of bitterness, significant expense, and unsatisfactory results.
Bottom line: Contesting a will is expensive, emotionally devastating, and rarely successful. The time to prevent this is now - not after it's too late.
So if the problem isn't love or intent, what is it? The answer comes down to the structure of the plan itself.
It's Not About Trust - It's About Structure
The issue in blended families is not love. It is not mistrust. It is an incomplete estate plan.
When your estate plan is incomplete, you could transfer ownership outright to your spouse and remove safeguards. You rely entirely on future decisions you will not be able to influence. You aren't educated on what could go wrong, and you don't know what options are available to ensure your plan does what you want it to.
The way people end up with incomplete plans is when they create a set of documents without strategic guidance, without being educated on what could happen, and without fully understanding what they're doing - even if they've worked with a lawyer.
But documents alone do not ensure your loved ones will be protected. What protects families is thoughtful design, an advisor who understands you and your family, and can help you craft a complete estate plan that ensures the people you love most will be cared for the way you want, and is updated over time as your life and assets change.
That may include:
- Using a trust designed with asset protection in mind, instead of leaving assets outright.
- Defining what your spouse can use during their lifetime.
- Preserving a portion of assets for your children.
- Coordinating beneficiary designations with your overall plan.
- Communicating your intentions while you are alive.
This approach does not signal distrust. It creates clarity and security for the people you love most.
Bottom line: A well-designed plan protects your spouse AND preserves your children's inheritance. You don't have to choose.
Take Action Now to Protect Everyone You Love
If you are part of a blended family, a simple "everything to my spouse" plan may not accomplish what you believe it will. You need a plan that works when your loved ones need it to.
At Law Mother, we begin with education. We help you understand exactly what would happen to you, your family, and your assets if you were to die now. Then we design an estate plan that clarifies and documents your intentions and goals. Most importantly, when you are gone, your loved ones will not be left alone while they're grieving. They will have a trusted advisor who understands you and them, and can guide them through the process.
Let's create a plan that protects your spouse, honors your children, and prevents the conflict I see far too often.
Click here to schedule a complimentary 15-minute call to get started:
lawmother.com/go
This material was created for educational and informational purposes only and is not intended as ERISA, tax, legal, or investment advice. If you are seeking legal advice specific to your needs, such advice services must be obtained on your own, separate from this educational material.
%20New%20Blog.jpg)
Here’s What Can Happen to Blended Families When a Spouse Dies
Retirement accounts like 401(k)s and IRAs often represent the single largest category of wealth for American families. According to recent data, retirement funds in these accounts alone total roughly $21 trillion, and for many households, they compose over 34% of average household assets, even exceeding home equity. Given this scale, understanding how these accounts transfer to beneficiaries after death isn't just important, it's essential to protecting your family's financial future.
The challenge is that retirement accounts sit at a unique intersection of beneficiary designation law, income tax rules, trust design, and post-death distribution requirements. This creates planning tension that shows up in almost every family situation: people want asset control and protection for their loved ones, but they also want to minimize tax consequences. With retirement accounts, those goals can work directly against each other.
In this article, you'll learn how the new tax law fundamentally changed distribution rules for inherited retirement accounts, which beneficiaries still qualify for favorable tax treatment, and how properly designed trusts can help address both tax concerns and protection needs for your family.
How Tax Laws Affect Retirement Accounts
Most inherited assets pass to beneficiaries income tax-free, but retirement accounts are an exception. Depending on the type of retirement account, withdrawals are subject to income tax that the beneficiary must report on their personal tax return.
Before 2020, many beneficiaries could stretch retirement account distributions over their own life expectancy, allowing the account to continue growing tax-deferred for decades, and stretching the distributions to control income. A young beneficiary inheriting a retirement account could take small required minimum distributions each year based on their life expectancy, lowering their income tax and potentially letting the account grow for 40 or 50 years.
The Setting Every Community Up for Retirement Enhancement (SECURE) Act of 2019 eliminated this option for most beneficiaries. Many people who now inherit a retirement account must withdraw the entire balance within 10 years of the account owner's death. This dramatically accelerates the tax burden on inherited retirement accounts.
The impact can be substantial. Shorter withdrawal windows force larger annual distributions, which push beneficiaries into higher tax brackets. When an adult child inherits a significant IRA during their peak earning years, those forced withdrawals compound with their regular income, potentially pushing them from a 24% federal tax bracket into 32% or even 35%. What looks like a $500,000 inheritance could net significantly less after taxes.
Understanding which beneficiaries avoid these harsh rules becomes critical to effective estate planning.
Who Gets Better Treatment Under Current Law
Not everyone faces the 10-year withdrawal rule. The SECURE Act created a category of beneficiaries who receive more favorable treatment. This category includes surviving spouses, minor children of the account owner, individuals not more than 10 years younger than the account owner, and disabled or chronically ill individuals.
Surviving spouses have the most flexibility. A surviving spouse can roll an inherited IRA into their own IRA, essentially treating it as if it had always been theirs. This allows the account to continue growing tax-deferred, and required minimum distributions don't begin until the spouse reaches the required age, which in 2026 is 73. This option can extend the tax-deferred growth by years or even decades.
Minor children of the account owner can use their life expectancy to calculate distributions, but only until they reach age 21. Once they turn 21, the 10-year clock starts ticking, and the account must be fully distributed by the time they turn 31.
Spouses generally can take distributions based on their life expectancy, which can extend significantly beyond 10 years for younger beneficiaries or those close in age to the account owner.
The key planning insight here is that preserving these favorable tax treatments requires careful coordination between your beneficiary designations and your estate planning documents. This is just one reason why you want a full estate plan, and not just a trust. When we are planning your estate, we consider the most favorable way to distribute your retirement account assets to your heirs.
How the Right Trust Can Solve Multiple Problems
You may have heard that naming a trust as beneficiary of a retirement account automatically creates problems or makes taxes worse. That's not accurate. The reality is that any planning for retirement accounts requires attention to detail, whether you're using a will, a trust, or simply naming beneficiaries directly.
The advantage of using a trust is that it can solve problems that direct beneficiary designations can't. Direct designations offer no protection if your beneficiary is going through a divorce, has creditor issues, or struggles with money management. They provide no control over when or how your beneficiary receives the money. And they give you no say in where the funds go if your beneficiary dies before fully withdrawing the account.
A properly designed trust addresses all these concerns while still preserving favorable tax treatment. The key is understanding that different trust designs serve different purposes, and the right choice depends on your specific family and financial situation.
Some trusts are designed to distribute retirement account withdrawals immediately to your beneficiary. This approach keeps the money taxed at your beneficiary's personal tax rate rather than the trust's tax rate, which matters because trusts reach the highest federal tax bracket at very low income levels. These trusts still provide some control; they can limit how much beyond the required minimum your beneficiary can access each year, and they control where remaining funds go if your beneficiary dies.
Other trusts are designed to hold withdrawn funds and distribute them according to standards you set, such as for health, education, or general support. These trusts provide the strongest protection from creditors, divorce, and poor spending decisions. The trade-off is that any income kept in the trust faces higher tax rates. For some families, particularly those with beneficiaries who have significant protection needs, this tax cost is worth paying for the security the trust provides.
What matters most is that your trust is specifically designed to work with retirement accounts. Generic trusts drafted without considering retirement account rules can create serious problems, forcing rapid withdrawals or losing favorable tax treatment entirely.
Why the Right Support Matters
Here's what many people don't realize: retirement account planning requires knowledge that goes beyond simply creating basic estate planning documents. The rules governing how retirement accounts interact with trusts are complex, they've changed significantly in recent years, and they continue to evolve as the IRS issues new guidance.
An estate planning attorney who understands retirement accounts will ask you specific questions about your family situation. Do you have a spouse who will need access to funds, or are you concerned about protecting assets in a remarriage situation? Are your children financially responsible, or do they need protection from their own decisions? Does anyone in your family have special needs that require careful coordination with government benefits? Are there significant age differences between your beneficiaries that affect tax planning?
Your attorney will also support you to ensure your trust meets specific requirements that allow the IRS to look through the trust to the actual beneficiaries. This involves technical details about how the trust is structured, when it becomes permanent, how beneficiaries are identified, and what documentation must be provided after your death. Miss any of these requirements, and your family could face the worst possible tax treatment.
Beyond the technical requirements, coordinating your retirement accounts with your overall estate plan means making sure all the pieces work together. This includes reviewing not just your primary beneficiary designations but also your contingent beneficiaries, confirming your trust provisions align with your intentions, and building in flexibility for the trustee to respond to tax law changes after your death.
All these considerations must be taken into account so you can create the right estate plan that works for you and everyone you love. There's no one-size-fits-all estate plan. What works perfectly for one family could create problems for another. This is why having the right support from an attorney who’s also a trusted advisor to you and your loved ones matters.
Taking the Next Step
Retirement accounts are too valuable and too complex to leave to chance. The difference between planning done right and planning done casually can easily cost your family tens of thousands of dollars in unnecessary taxes, not to mention the loss of asset protection and control over how your legacy is used.
At Law Mother, we help you create an Estate Plan that coordinates your retirement accounts with your overall estate plan, preserves favorable tax treatment where possible, and provides the protection your family needs. We don't create a set of one-size-fits-all documents. Instead, we take the time to understand your specific situation, assets, family dynamics, explain the options available to you, and design a plan that doesn’t fail when your loved ones need it to work.
Click here to schedule a complimentary 15-minute discovery call to get started: lawmother.com/go
This material was created for educational and informational purposes only and is not intended as ERISA, tax, legal, or investment advice. If you are seeking legal advice specific to your needs, such advice services must be obtained on your own, separate from this educational material.

Here’s What Happens to Your Retirement Accounts After You Die
Last week, we covered how it works when you create a trust through your will. This week, I'll show you how a trust created during your lifetime (called a revocable living trust) functions differently, what your family experiences when you've set up a living trust, and how to decide which approach truly fits your situation.
As a quick refresher, a “testamentary trust” is created in your will and only comes into existence after your estate goes through probate. As a result, your family could wait many months, and sometimes even years, while the court oversees the process of probating your will and establishing your trust. If your objective is to keep your family out of court, and have total privacy after your incapacity or death, a testamentary trust won't accomplish that.
A living trust, created during your life, and properly “funded” will keep your family out of court, provide the privacy you likely want for them, and generally make things a lot easier for the people you love, when something happens to you.
In this article, I'll explain how living trusts provide those benefits, help you weigh the tradeoffs between the two approaches, and explain how to be your own best advisor, and make informed decisions.
How a Living Trust Works
A living trust, often called a revocable living trust, is created and funded while you're living and have legal capacity to make decisions. You transfer ownership of your assets into the trust now, naming yourself as the initial trustee. This means you maintain complete control during your lifetime. You can buy property, sell property, change investments, and manage everything exactly as you did before. The trust doesn't restrict you in any way.
The trust agreement includes detailed instructions about what happens to trust assets when you die or if you become incapacitated. Within the trust agreement, you will name a successor trustee, the person who will take over management of the trust assets when you can no longer serve as trustee. You specify who receives trust assets, when they receive them, and under what conditions. All the protective provisions you might include in a testamentary trust can be included in a living trust.
Here's the crucial distinction between a living trust and a testamentary trust: when you die or if you become incapacitated and cannot make decisions for yourself, the living trust already exists and already owns your assets. Your successor trustee doesn't need court permission to begin managing trust property. There's no probate filing. No waiting for court approval. No public disclosure of your assets or beneficiaries. The successor trustee simply follows the instructions you've provided in the trust agreement.
This means your family avoids the delay, expense, and public exposure of probate court. Your trustee can immediately pay bills, manage property, and begin distributing assets to your beneficiaries according to your timeline. If you've included provisions protecting your children's inheritance until they reach a certain age, those protections start working immediately. Your family gets the benefit of your planning right when they need it most.
The living trust also provides protection if you become incapacitated before you die. If illness, injury, or cognitive decline leaves you unable to manage your own affairs, your successor trustee can step in and handle things for you without requiring your family to go to court for guardianship proceedings. Your chosen successor simply steps into the role you've defined for them.
However - and this is critically important - living trusts only control assets that are actually transferred into the trust. In the world of estate planning lawyers, we call this "funding" the trust, and it's a crucial step many people overlook, even when working with a lawyer. If you create a living trust but never change the title on your house or retitle your bank accounts, then those assets aren't protected by the trust. When you die, those assets will need to go through probate. The trust can only control what it owns.
This is why working with a lawyer who has systems and processes set up specifically for estate planning, and ideally Life & Legacy Planning®, is so important. Creating a trust agreement is just the first step, and needs to be part of a full plan that covers all of your assets, ensures all of your assets are titled properly, all beneficiary designations are clarified and updated, and you are clear on how to keep everything up to date throughout the rest of your life. We have processes in our office for supporting just that.
Now that you understand how both types of trusts function, the question becomes: which one makes sense for your specific situation?
Understanding the Real Tradeoffs
Why would anyone choose a testamentary trust if living trusts offer so many advantages? The main reason comes down to upfront effort and cost. Creating a testamentary trust is usually less expensive initially because you're just adding provisions to your will. You don't have to transfer assets into a trust during your lifetime. All that happens in the probate process after you die.
For some, the cost of probate might not be substantial enough to justify the upfront expense of creating and funding a living trust. Others aren’t concerned about the probate process at all.
But consider the hidden costs your family will face. Even a simple probate proceeding typically costs several thousand dollars in legal fees and court costs. The process usually takes at least months, and often years. Your family must handle this while they're grieving, gathering documents, communicating with attorneys, and dealing with ongoing stress.
Compare that to the experience with a properly funded living trust. Your family meets with your successor trustee, who already knows what you wanted. They work together to handle immediate needs, notify beneficiaries, and distribute assets according to your wishes. The process is private, usually faster, and doesn't require court oversight. For most families, this experience is far less stressful and ultimately less expensive than probate.
Consider your family dynamics as well. If you have family members who might contest your wishes, the public nature of probate can fuel disputes. Anyone can access probate files and see what you left to whom. A living trust keeps everything private, which can help minimize conflict.
In addition, consider your specific assets and their complexity. If you own real estate in multiple states, you're facing probate proceedings in each state where you own property. A living trust holding all your real estate avoids this entirely. If you own a business, probate delays can harm business operations. A living trust allows seamless continuation of business management.
Understanding these tradeoffs helps clarify which approach makes sense for your situation. But you don't have to figure this out alone. Work with an experienced attorney - who’s also your trusted advisor - who can walk you through your specific circumstances so you’re confident you’re doing the right thing by those you love.
How I Help You Create a Plan That Actually Works
At Law Mother, we don't push everyone toward one type of trust. Instead, we start by helping you understand what will actually happen if you become incapacitated or when you die, based on the specifics of your family dynamics and your assets. We’ll walk you through the real costs, the real timeline, and the real experience your loved ones will face. Then we'll help you evaluate what matters most to you and make an informed decision that fits your desires and budget.
If a living trust makes sense for your situation, we won’t just create the document and send you on your way. We'll help you fund the trust properly, making sure assets are retitled correctly and nothing is overlooked. Then, we’ll make sure your plan stays up to date throughout your lifetime, and you have support when you need it throughout life.
Most importantly, we'll be there for your family when you're gone or if you become incapacitated. That ongoing relationship makes all the difference. Your loved ones won't be left alone trying to figure out what to do. They'll have a trusted advisor who knows you, knows your wishes, and can guide them when you can’t.
If you’d like this kind of care for yourself and the people you love, use this link to schedule a complimentary 15-minute discovery call to get started today: www.lawmother.com/go
This material was created for educational and informational purposes only and is not intended as ERISA, tax, legal, or investment advice. If you are seeking legal advice specific to your needs, such advice services must be obtained on your own, separate from this educational material.

Creating a Trust in Your Will vs. Creating a Living Trust: Part 2
You've probably heard that trusts help families avoid probate court and protect assets for the people you love. Maybe you've even talked to a lawyer who mentioned including a trust in your will. It sounds like a good solution, but here's what most people don't realize: a trust created in your will works very differently from a living trust you create today, and the difference will have a major impact on your loved ones when you die.
Both options use the word "trust," which makes them sound similar. But the experience your family will have after your death depends entirely on which type you choose. More importantly, these different approaches serve different goals, and understanding what you're actually trying to accomplish is the most critical part of making the right choice.
In this two-part series, I'll help you understand what each type of trust actually does and how to choose the approach that matches what matters most to you and your loved ones. Here in Part 1, let’s dive into what happens when you create a trust in your will and help you evaluate what you're really trying to achieve.
What Happens When You Create a Trust in Your Will
A trust created in your will, called a testamentary trust, only comes into existence after you die, and after your executor has navigated a court process to establish the trust. Your will might say something like "upon my death, I direct that my assets be held in trust for my children until they reach age 25." This provision offers some protection by controlling when your children receive their inheritance. But it doesn't keep your family out of court.
All wills must go through probate court. Therefore, when you die with a will containing trust provisions, your loved ones must go through probate before the trust can be created. This process typically takes months, sometimes years. While your loved ones wait for the process to unfold, your assets are basically frozen, potentially putting your loved ones in an unstable financial position.
Here’s what the probate process looks like:
- Your family must first locate your original will and file it with the probate court.
- The court then officially appoints your named executor, who must notify all potential heirs and creditors of your death.
- Your executor must gather all your assets, have them appraised, pay your debts and taxes, and prepare detailed accounting reports for the court.
- Only after the court reviews and approves everything can your assets be distributed into the newly created trust, which must be approved by the judge.
Your family may also face significant costs. Probate involves court filing fees, legal fees, appraisal costs, and sometimes accounting fees. These expenses come directly out of your estate, reducing what's left for your loved ones. In many states, attorney fees and executor fees are calculated as a percentage of your estate's value. And because probate is a public court process, anyone can access information about what you owned and who you left it to.
Here's what really matters: you're essentially doing double the work to achieve the same outcome you could have accomplished with a living trust, but with added expense, a longer timeline, and far greater possibility for family conflict. You're creating a trust that provides the same protections a living trust offers, but you're forcing your family to go through an entire court process first. And that's only part of the problem. Because a will only takes effect when you die, it also leaves a critical gap in protection while you're still alive.
What a Will Can't Do While You're Still Alive
A will only takes effect when you die, which means it does nothing to protect you if you become incapacitated first. Most people rely on a Power of Attorney, or “POA,” to authorize someone to manage their finances if they're unable to do so. But here's the catch: a POA automatically ends the moment you die.
That creates a dangerous gap. The second you pass, your POA's authority disappears — but your executor has no power either until the probate court officially appoints them. Accounts get frozen, bills go unpaid, and your family can't touch a thing while they wait. A living trust eliminates this gap entirely. Because it exists right now, your successor trustee has uninterrupted authority to manage your assets through incapacity and seamlessly at your death — no court approval required, no delay, no financial limbo for your family.
All of this brings us to the most important question: what are you actually trying to accomplish? The gaps we've just covered - probate delays, frozen accounts, the POA cliff - aren't inevitable. They're the result of choosing a planning tool without first understanding your real goals.
What Are You Really Trying to Accomplish?
Before you can decide between a testamentary trust and a living trust, you need to get clear about what you're actually trying to achieve. Most people know they want "a trust" because someone told them trusts are good planning tools. But trusts accomplish different things depending on how they're structured.
Is your primary goal avoiding probate court? If keeping your family out of court matters to you, then how you create your trust makes a huge difference. A testamentary trust doesn't avoid probate. A living trust does. If probate avoidance is your main concern, that answer alone might determine your choice to create a living trust.
Do you want to control how and when your beneficiaries receive their inheritance? Maybe you have young children, and you don't want them inheriting everything at age 18. Both testamentary trusts and living trusts can accomplish these distribution goals. From a distribution control standpoint, both types of trusts can be structured identically. However, assets will not be available for your children during the probate process, so if availability is a concern for you, a living trust may be a good choice.
Do you want to protect your assets if you become incapacitated before you die? This is where the timing of trust creation makes a critical difference. A testamentary trust doesn't exist until you die, so it offers no protection during your lifetime. If you become unable to manage your affairs, your family would need to pursue guardianship or conservatorship proceedings in court. A living trust, however, allows your chosen successor trustee to step in and manage things for you without court intervention.
Understanding your true priorities helps clarify which approach makes sense. If your goals center entirely on controlling distributions and you're not concerned about probate costs or delays, then a testamentary trust might suffice. But if you want probate avoidance, incapacity protection, or immediate access to trust protections when you die, then the timing of when you create the trust becomes critically important.
Next week, in Part 2, I'll explain how living trusts work and how to make the final decision about which approach fits your situation.
How I Help You Identify What Matters Most
At Law Mother, we don't focus on the documents themselves because we believe documents are the byproduct of good planning. Planning starts with getting clear on what matters most, so our estate planning process starts with education and understanding during a Estate Plan Strategy Session. During your session, you’ll get clear about what would actually happen to your family when you die or if you become incapacitated. We'll walk through the real costs, the real timeline, and the real experience your loved ones will face. Then we'll identify your true priorities so you can make an informed decision and create the right plan for you.
Click here to schedule a complimentary 15-minute discovery call to get started: www.lawmother.com/go
This material was created for educational and informational purposes only and is not intended as ERISA, tax, legal, or investment advice. If you are seeking legal advice specific to your needs, such advice services must be obtained on your own, separate from this educational material.

Creating a Trust in Your Will vs. Creating a Living Trust
When someone calls an estate planning attorney asking for a "quick look" at their documents, the request usually sounds straightforward. Maybe the documents were created using an online service, and they want to “just be sure” the documents are sound. Perhaps there's been a move to a new state and a question about whether the plan still works. Or maybe the documents are a few (or more) years old, and there's uncertainty about whether they're still valid. Most people expect a simple yes or no answer, preferably during a brief phone call or quick and cheap consultation.
The reality is that there's no such thing as a simple document review when it comes to estate planning. What seems like a straightforward question actually opens a myriad of legal, financial, and personal considerations that require thorough analysis and consideration, if you want to ensure your plan doesn’t fail the people you love.
This article explores why an estate plan review requires more depth than you may expect, what a proper review actually involves, and why investing in a review of your plan now can save your loved ones from extremely costly problems later.
The Hidden Complexity Behind Document Reviews
When someone asks an attorney to review estate planning documents, they're really asking several interconnected questions that affect their and their loved ones’ future security. Each question requires careful analysis, and skipping any of them could create a legal mess later that may be costly and time-consuming to resolve.
Here are the steps an attorney should take:
- Determine whether the documents are legally valid under current law and in your jurisdiction. State laws, federal and tax laws change frequently. What was legally valid when documents were originally created might not meet today's requirements - or were never valid to begin with (especially if you’ve drafted the documents yourself). For example, you likely don’t know that most banks and brokerage houses will not accept a power of attorney signed more than 3 years prior, and some even more recent. That means your loved ones could have no access to your assets in the event of your incapacity.If you’ve moved from one state to another, an analysis of how you want your plan to work and whether it does under your new state’s law could require a chunk of attorney time. Tax laws may also impact your plan, and the attorney will need to determine whether your plan should be amended to take advantage of tax strategies that may apply now. These kinds of reviews could cost more in attorney time than it would to simply create a new plan from scratch.
- Evaluate whether the plan actually accomplishes what you think it does. Many people believe they have a complete estate plan when they actually have significant gaps. This is especially a problem when you create a set of documents and think you’ve created a whole plan. This is almost never the case.
Gaps in your estate plan may include whether the plan addresses the following:
- What happens if a primary beneficiary dies before you do - both in your plan documents and your beneficiary policies
- Whether minor children have been protected from receiving large inheritances before they're mature enough to handle money responsibly
- Whether the plan accounts for the possibility of incapacity, not just death
- Whether your loved ones know where to find all your assets, so none get lost
- Whether your loved ones know how to access your passwords
- If you have enough insurance to ensure your loved ones don’t end up in financial stress
- If accounts will be accessible to your loved ones after you die, so that bills continue to get paid
These are just some of the gaps that need to be addressed. It’s not an exhaustive list.
- Assess whether the documents work together as a cohesive plan or create conflicts that could lead to expensive and time-consuming court battles. There are cases where someone's will says one thing, their trust says another, and their beneficiary designations contradict both. When conflicts exist, families will end up in court, while a judge, a complete stranger to you and your loved ones, decides what you really meant. It’s possible no one is happy with the outcome, especially if they’ve spent thousands of dollars and years in court.
But the complexity doesn't stop there. Even perfectly drafted documents can fail if a critical step in the planning process was overlooked.
The BIG Problem Nobody Talks About
Here's something that catches almost everyone by surprise: if you’ve created a trust, it will not work if assets haven't been properly transferred into it and beneficiary designations or TOD or POD forms have not been completed properly. In the world of estate planning, we call this “funding”, and it is where most trust plans completely fail (even if you worked with a lawyer to create your legal documents).
You could spend thousands on a will, trust, health care directive and power of attorney, all delivered to you in a beautiful binder, all of which becomes worthless because your lawyer didn’t have a process to ensure you changed the title on your bank accounts, your house, or your investment accounts, and doesn’t have a system to ensure that new assets are titled properly when acquired in the future. And, it’s not just titling, but beneficiary designations that need to be reviewed and updated regularly. Finally, the mere fact that the assets exist should really be inventoried at least annually.
Reviewing whether an estate plan is properly funded requires examining title documents, account statements, beneficiary designations, and business documents. An attorney needs to verify that each asset is titled correctly and that beneficiary designations align with the overall plan. This isn't a five-minute task. A review requires methodical analysis of the entire financial picture.
Consider this common scenario: someone creates a trust with careful instructions for how assets should be divided among family members, but their life insurance policy still names their spouse as the sole beneficiary. When they die, the insurance payout goes directly to the spouse, bypassing the trust entirely. That money could end up with a future spouse or stepchildren rather than the children the plan was designed to protect. A thorough review would have caught this conflict while it could still be fixed easily.
This is exactly why attorneys can't offer quick, surface-level reviews. There is a lot of time and resource allocation that must go into each review - even if you think your situation is simple.
Why Cutting Corners Creates Liability
When someone asks an attorney to "just quickly review" documents, they're asking for legal advice based on incomplete information. Attorneys can't responsibly do that. If an attorney says a plan looks fine after a cursory review, and it later turns out there were serious problems that weren't caught, you (or your family) may have a case against the attorney for malpractice. More importantly, your loved ones could suffer significant financial harm that proper planning would have prevented.
Professional responsibility to you, the client, requires that your attorney either perform a thorough review or decline to review documents at all. There's no middle ground that protects you. This means the attorney must examine documents in detail, ask questions about your family dynamics and assets, research how current laws apply to your specific circumstances, and provide an analysis of findings. This process requires time, expertise, and an associated cost.
While the investment in a thorough review might seem like more than you thought it should, it pales in comparison to what you and your loved ones face when inadequate planning fails at the worst possible time. By then, it will be too late to fix.
What to Reasonably Expect
The consultation fee for a thorough review might seem expensive until it's compared to what families will spend if an inadequate plan fails. Probate proceedings typically cost thousands of dollars and take a year or more. Legal battles between family members over unclear provisions can cost tens of thousands. The emotional toll of watching loved ones fight over an estate while grieving a loss is incalculable.
If you want to ensure you have a complete plan that works for you and your loved ones, saves money, keeps them out of court and conflict, and protects your minor children if you were no longer able to raise them, you should expect to pay at least $1,000 for a comprehensive review of your plan - including an inventory of all your assets, what matters to you, and a review of all of your documents - no matter how “easy” you think your situation may be (in my experience almost everyone thinks their circumstances are easy, but almost never are).
Expect to fill out a questionnaire, or complete some “homework” for the attorney before you meet, and expect that the attorney will spend time preparing to meet with you, and hours to review your current documents, financial information, and statements, the status of trust finding, meet with you, and offer counsel based on the analysis of your current plan. If you need or want to make updates, there will be an additional cost.
How We Support You and Your Loved Ones
A comprehensive review is not about the documents themselves. It’s about investing in peace of mind, knowing your loved ones will be cared for according to your wishes, without unnecessary legal complications, family conflict, or financial waste. It’s about making sure no assets are lost, your loved ones have financial stability, your children aren't taken into the care of strangers, and your family knows what to do when the time comes.
Click here to schedule a complimentary 15-minute discovery call to learn how we can support you.
This material was created for educational and informational purposes only and is not intended as ERISA, tax, legal, or investment advice. If you are seeking legal advice specific to your needs, such advice services must be obtained on your own, separate from this educational material.

Why Quick and Simple Estate Plan Reviews Don’t Exist
When planning for your death, there’s one issue you may not have thought about, but is so important to your beneficiaries: will your loved ones have to pay taxes on what you leave them? The answer isn't straightforward because it depends largely on the types of assets you're passing down, how much you are passing on, and where you reside at the time of your death. Understanding how different accounts and assets are taxed can help you make informed decisions that minimize the tax burden on your beneficiaries.
In this article, I'll break down the tax implications of various types of inheritance, from cash accounts to retirement plans, so you can plan strategically and protect more of your wealth for the people you love.
Estate Taxes: Will They Apply?
There are three things we’ll never know about you, no matter how much planning we do now, and how proactive we are about your future planning: when you’ll die, what your assets will be when you die, and what the federal estate tax exemption amount will be when you die. Over the past 25 years, the federal estate tax exemption has been as low as $675,000 and, today, as high as $15,000,000 per person.
This means that in 2026, the federal estate tax only applies to estates exceeding $15 million for individuals or $30 million for married couples. If your estate falls below this amount, your estate won't pay federal estate taxes. If your estate’s value exceeds the exemption, taxes will need to be paid before beneficiaries receive their distributions. And, if you are married, it’s critically important that estate planning is reviewed and updated after the death of the first spouse to use and preserve the full estate tax exemption of the first spouse.
Also know that some states impose their own estate or inheritance taxes with much lower exemption amounts. Understanding both federal and state requirements is crucial for comprehensive planning.
Finally, note that estate tax, income tax, and capital gains tax all matter when we’re talking about inheritance (trust taxes may apply, too, but for the sake of brevity, I’ll discuss trust taxes in a future article). Even though you’re planning for your death, there is much more to consider than the federal or state estate tax. You need to also create a strategy for each type of asset you own.
With this framework in mind, let's explore how different types of assets are taxed when your loved ones inherit from you.
Cash and Bank Accounts: The Simple Answer
When your beneficiaries inherit cash from checking accounts, savings accounts, or money market accounts, they receive favorable tax treatment. If you leave someone $50,000 in your savings account, they receive the full $50,000 without federal income tax consequences.
There's one small exception to note. If your account earns interest after your death but before distribution, that interest becomes taxable income to the beneficiary. However, the principal amount itself remains tax-free.
This straightforward treatment makes cash accounts one of the most tax-efficient assets to inherit, which is why many estate plans include liquid assets alongside other investments.
Investment Accounts: The Step-Up in Basis Advantage
Taxable investment accounts, including brokerage accounts holding stocks, bonds, or mutual funds, benefit from what's called a "step-up in basis." This tax provision can save your beneficiaries a significant amount of money.
Here's how it works. When you purchase an investment, your "basis" is typically what you paid for it. If you bought stock for $10,000 and it grew to $100,000, you'd normally owe capital gains tax on that $90,000 gain if you sold it. However, when your beneficiaries inherit that stock, their basis "steps up" to the fair market value at your death, which is $100,000 in this example. If they immediately sell it for $100,000, they owe no capital gains tax at all. However, if they sell it later and the stock has appreciated, they will owe capital gains tax - but only on the amount above $100,000.
This step-up in basis is one of the most powerful tax benefits in estate planning, effectively erasing all capital gains that accumulated during your lifetime. Your beneficiaries only pay capital gains tax on appreciation that occurs after they inherit the asset.
Understanding this benefit can influence your gifting strategy. Sometimes it's more tax-efficient to hold appreciated assets until death rather than gifting them during your lifetime, when the recipient would inherit your lower basis, and therefore pay taxes on capital gains incurred via a sale after the gift of the asset.
Retirement Accounts: A More Complex Picture
Retirement accounts like 401(k)s and traditional IRAs present more complicated tax considerations. Unlike other inherited assets, these accounts don't receive a step-up in basis, and they come with income tax obligations.
When your beneficiaries inherit a traditional retirement account, they must pay ordinary income tax on distributions. If you had $500,000 in your IRA and your daughter inherits it, she'll owe income tax on every dollar she withdraws. The tax rate depends on her income bracket, which means careful withdrawal planning becomes essential.
The SECURE Act of 2019 (and amended in 2022) changed the rules significantly for most beneficiaries. Previously, non-spouse beneficiaries could "stretch" distributions over the balance of the rest of their lifetime, which can have significant tax benefits, keeping beneficiaries in a lower tax bracket and deferring taxes over a longer period of time. Now, in most cases, all retirement benefits must be paid to your beneficiaries (and taxed for income tax purposes) within 10 years of your death. This compressed timeline can push beneficiaries into higher income tax brackets if they're not strategic about timing their withdrawals.
Spouses who inherit retirement accounts have more flexibility. They can roll the inherited account into their own IRA, allowing them to defer distributions until they reach the required minimum distribution age.
Roth IRAs offer a distinct advantage. While beneficiaries still face the 10-year distribution rule, qualified Roth IRA withdrawals are tax-free. If you've paid taxes upfront by contributing to a Roth account, your beneficiaries receive the funds without owing any income tax.
Life Insurance: Generally Tax-Free
Life insurance death benefits typically pass to beneficiaries income-tax-free, making them an excellent estate planning tool. If you have a $1 million life insurance policy, your beneficiary receives the full $1 million without paying income tax on it.
There's an important caveat regarding estate taxes. If you own the policy on your own life, the death benefit may be included in your taxable estate. For very large estates, this could trigger estate taxes even though the beneficiary won't owe income tax. Advanced planning strategies, such as irrevocable life insurance trusts, can remove life insurance from your taxable estate.
Strategic Planning Makes All the Difference
Understanding how different assets are taxed when inherited allows you to structure your estate strategically. You might choose to leave tax-efficient assets like cash or appreciated stocks to certain beneficiaries while directing retirement accounts to others who can better manage the tax consequences.
At Law Mother, we help you create an estate plan that considers not just what you're leaving behind, but how to structure your assets to minimize taxes and maximize what your loved ones receive. Tax laws change frequently, and your circumstances evolve over time, so having ongoing, strategic guidance makes all the difference between a plan that works when your loved ones need it to. That’s where we come in.
Don't leave your beneficiaries struggling with unexpected tax bills. Click here to schedule a complimentary 15-minute discovery call and learn how we can support you.
This material was created for educational and informational purposes only and is not intended as ERISA, tax, legal, or investment advice. If you are seeking legal advice specific to your needs, such advice services must be obtained on your own, separate from this educational material.

Understanding Inheritance Taxes: What You and Your Beneficiaries Need to Know
It's a question I hear often: if I die with debt, will my family be stuck paying it off? The short answer is it depends on several factors, including the type of debt you have, how your assets are titled, and whether anyone co-signed on your obligations. Understanding how debt works after death can help you make informed decisions today to protect the people you care about most.
Note that for purposes of this article, we’ll assume that you either have a will or no estate plan at all. Trusts may handle debt differently, depending on the type of trust(s) created. If you have questions about trusts and debt, book a call with us using the link below to learn how we can support you.
Now let's explore what happens to different types of debt when you die, who might be responsible for paying them, and what steps you can take now to minimize the burden on your loved ones.
How Debt Is Generally Handled After Death
When you die, your debts don't simply disappear. Instead, they become obligations of your estate. Your “estate” is the legal name for everything you own at the time of your death. Your estate includes your bank accounts, real estate, investments, personal property, and any other assets you've accumulated.
Before any of your assets can be distributed to your beneficiaries or heirs, your debts will be paid from your estate. This process happens during probate, a court-supervised procedure for settling your financial affairs after death. The person handling your estate is responsible for identifying all your debts, notifying creditors, and paying legitimate claims from available estate assets.
If your estate has enough assets to cover all your debts, creditors get paid and your beneficiaries receive what's left over. But what happens if your debts exceed the assets of your estate? In most cases, creditors accept whatever the estate can pay, and the remaining debt dies with you. Your family members generally are not responsible for paying your debts from their own money unless they fall into one of the exceptions I'll discuss below.
Types of Debt and Who's Responsible
Not all debts are treated equally after death. Some types of debt carry more risk for your loved ones than others:
Secured debts are tied to specific assets, like your home (mortgage) or car (auto loan). If you die with a mortgage, the lender has a claim against the property itself. If no one takes over the payments, the lender can foreclose and sell the home to recover what's owed. However, if someone inherits the property and wants to keep it, they'll generally need to continue making payments or refinance the loan in their own name.
Unsecured debts like credit cards, personal loans, and medical bills don't have specific collateral backing them. These creditors can make claims against your estate during probate, but if the estate lacks sufficient funds, they typically cannot pursue your family members for payment. These debts may still need to be paid by your estate before your loved ones receive their inheritance.
Joint debts are a different story entirely. If you took out a loan or opened a credit card account jointly with another person (typically a spouse), that person remains fully responsible for the entire debt after your death, regardless of what happens to your estate. This is why it's crucial to understand the difference between being a joint account holder and being an authorized user, the latter of which doesn't create personal liability for the debt.
Co-signed debts also create ongoing liability to your co-signer. If someone co-signed a loan for you (perhaps a parent co-signed your student loans or a friend co-signed your car loan), that co-signer becomes fully responsible for repaying the debt when you die. The creditor can pursue the co-signer for the full amount owed, and this obligation exists regardless of what happens with your estate.
While these general rules apply in most situations, there's one important exception that affects married couples in certain states. If you're married and live in a community property state (Arizona, California, Idaho, Louisiana, Nevada, New Mexico, Texas, Washington, or Wisconsin), special rules apply. In these states, debts incurred during the marriage are generally considered community debts, meaning both spouses are responsible for them. This means your surviving spouse may be personally liable for debts you accumulated during the marriage, even if only your name appears on the account.
Beyond these state-specific rules, there are a few other scenarios where your family might find themselves responsible for your debts.
When Family Members Might Be Liable
Beyond joint accounts and co-signed loans, there are other situations where your family might face responsibility for your debts. If your spouse or another family member continues using your credit cards after your death without notifying the creditor, they can become personally liable for those charges. Similarly, if a family member verbally agrees to pay your debts from their own funds (rather than from estate assets), they may create personal liability for themselves.
Some states also have "filial responsibility" laws that could, in theory, require adult children to pay for their parents' unpaid medical or long-term care expenses. However, these laws are rarely enforced and only exist in about half of U.S. states.
The good news is that with proper planning, you can take steps today to reduce the likelihood that your loved ones will face these complications.
Protecting Your Loved Ones From Your Debt
While you can't control everything, you can take steps now to minimize the impact of your debts on your family. Consider the financial implications before co-signing loans or opening joint accounts. Maintain adequate life insurance to cover major debts like mortgages. Keep good records of all your debts and assets so your executor knows what needs to be addressed. Most importantly, communicate openly with your family about your financial situation so they aren't blindsided after your death.
Finally, create or update your estate plan now before it’s too late. Once you lose capacity - or if you die suddenly - the opportunity to protect your loved ones from liability vanishes.
How I Help You Protect Your Loved Ones
Understanding what happens to debt after death is just one piece of comprehensive planning for your family's future. At Law Mother, we help you create an estate plan that addresses not just debt concerns, but all the practical and legal realities your loved ones will face when you're gone. We'll work with you to ensure your assets are properly titled, your documents clearly express your wishes, and your family has a trusted advisor to turn to for guidance when they need it most.
Take the first step toward peace of mind. Click here to schedule a complimentary 15-minute discovery call to learn how we can support you.
This material was created for educational and informational purposes only and is not intended as ERISA, tax, legal, or investment advice. If you are seeking legal advice specific to your needs, such advice services must be obtained on your own, separate from this educational material.

What Happens to Your Debt When You Die?
Legally Ever After Podcast

Legally Ever After Podcast

