ESTATE PLANNER

Yes, You need a P.L.A.N.

We’ll help you to stop delaying and finally get your ESTATE PLAN done for you and your family.

ESTATE PLANNING

Whether you choose our Will Based Plan or our Trust Plan it’s better than the Do Nothing Plan. Don’t choose the Do Nothing Plan, which leaves your family’s future up to the government. Instead let us help create an estate plan for your unique needs, ensuring your assets are protected and your wishes are honored.

• Comprehensive Estate Plans

• Revocable Living Trusts

• Powers of Attorney

• Advance Health Care Directives

• Last Wills and Testaments

• Special Needs Trusts

• Medicaid Asset Protection Trust

• Child Protection Planning

• Incapacity Planning

• Trust Funding

PROBATE ADMINISTRATION

Probate Administration can be complex and nuanced. We handle the complexities of probate while you focus on healing and remembering your loved one.

• Identifying and securing estate assets.

• Obtaining appraisals

• Overseeing the sale of estate property

• Assisting in the payment of bills and debts

• Preparing and filing probate court documents

• Preparing estate or inheritance taxes

• Collecting proceeds from life insurance policies

• Managing the estate checking account

• Transferring assets to the appropriate beneficiaries

• Making a final disbursement of assets to beneficiaries

REAL ESTATE

We ensure clear guidance in navigating a real estate transaction so your property conveyance can be seamless and stress-free.

• Condos, Co-Op, Single and Multi-Family Homes

• Deed Conveyances

• Heirs’ Property / Tangled Title Issues

• Purchase Agreements

• Real Estate Contract Drafting & Review

• Real Estate Sales and Closing

• Residential and Commercial Leases

Frequently Asked Questions

What is estate planning?

Estate planning is simply the process of organizing your affairs during your lifetime so that your people and property are protected after your passing. It involves making decisions about how you want your assets to be handled and ensuring that your wishes are carried out effectively. Beyond just distributing assets, estate planning also involves considerations such as minimizing taxes, providing for the care of minor children or other dependents, planning for incapacity, and ensuring that your healthcare and financial decisions are made according to your preferences.

How much does it cost?

It depends! Estate planning is not one size fits all, so it’s hard for us to give you a quote without knowing more about you. Even if you believe your situation is relatively simple, there are likely nuances you are not considering. We discuss our fees and process at length in the PLAN Design Meeting, after we have counseled you on all your options. At that time, you will choose the plan that is in line with what you want to pay.

We offer flat fees as opposed to billing by the hour, so you know exactly what your investment will be. Finally, we will only recommend planning with us if the amount you would save by doing an estate plan is greater than our fee.

Do you work with clients in all 50 states?

Estate planning is an area of law that is state-specific. That means you should work with an attorney licensed in the state in which you reside. I’m licensed in New York and New Jersey. If you live in New York or New Jersey, we can prepare your estate planning documents. If you do not, message us, and we will be happy to refer you to an attorney licensed in your state.

What are the initial steps to get started?

Simply schedule your 15 Minute Introduction Call.

Do I need a will or a trust?

You have two options with your estate planning: a Will-based plan, or a Living Trust-based plan.

Unfortunately, even a simple will is still subject to the expense and delays of probate. It’s not the complexity of the document itself that causes the time and expense, it’s the probate process. For this reason, most of our clients choose to create a living trust instead of a will, which is designed for simplicity and to avoid the probate process completely.

However, as part of an overall, comprehensive estate plan, a special “pour-over” will is used to appoint guardians for any minor children alive at your death.

A Living Trust is a document where you appoint a chosen individual to manage your assets should you become incapacitated and distribute them to your family at your death. It is almost always preferable to a will because it is designed to avoid the time, expense, and publicity of probate, which a will cannot avoid. It comes as a surprise to many of our clients that wills do not avoid probate court—they guarantee it!

We go over the differences between a Will and a Living Trust in depth during the PLAN Design Meeting. Ultimately, the decision is yours.

The Planners Project Law Firm, PLLC

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1500 Astor Ave 2nd Fl, Bronx NY 10469

(646) 504-2766

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