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Blog Posts
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- 2 concerns for real estate during Nevada probate proceedings
- 3 estate planning myths it’s time to debunk
- 3 kinds of taxes you may need to address during probate
- 3 kinds of taxes you may need to file during probate proceedings
- 3 reasons you should include secondary beneficiaries in your estate plan
- 3 things to consider when making your advance directive
- 4 questions you may have about estate planning
- 4 serious mistakes people make with when choosing an executor
- 4 things to know before writing your will in Nevada
- 4 ways to prevent power of attorney abuse
- 5 common mistakes to avoid when making an estate plan
- 5 commonly forgotten assets to include in an estate plan
- 5 key parts of an effective estate plan
- 5 things that happen during probate
- A carefully selected trustee is key to trust planning
- A closer look at trusts for education funding
- A few reasons to have a trust in Nevada
- A funeral trust gives testator control and family time to grieve
- A general overview of trust options
- A health care power of attorney can save money and relationships
- A revocable living trust may be more beneficial than probate
- A spendthrift trust can protect your family if properly written
- A trust can be based on age
- A trust may be the best option in estate planning
- A trust may offer various benefits concerning asset distribution
- A will is a simple form of estate planning
- A-B trusts in Nevada
- About disability planning
- About irrevocable trusts
- About micro estate planning
- Abusive guardianships
- Adding a special needs trust to an estate plan
- Addressing changes to tax laws in estate planning
- Addressing estate planning goals step by step
- Addressing estate planning goals when family circumstances change
- Addressing online assets is crucial to estate planning process
- Addressing the necessary estate planning topics
- Advantages of using an attorney instead of DIY estate planning
- Allocating personal property
- Am I too young to make an estate plan?
- An overview of estate administration responsibilities
- An overview of irrevocable trusts
- Analyzing the effectiveness of an estate plan
- Anonymity and lottery winnings
- Anticipating family conflict and creating an estate plan
- Appointing care agents may be in your best interest
- Are estate planning fees tax deductible?
- Are probate and estate administration the same?
- Are there any advantages of going through probate in Nevada?
- Are you aware of your non-probate assets?
- Are you considering appointing one of your children as executor?
- Are you dealing with an insolvent estate?
- Are you thinking about disinheriting your children?
- Are you worried about power of attorney abuse?
- Aretha Franklin’s handwritten wills submitted to court
- Aretha Franklin’s heirs will likely face estate taxes
- Artworks need special estate planning consideration
- As executor, do you know how to use a letter of testamentary?
- Assets and priorities in estate planning
- Assets with beneficiaries bypass probate
- Available options if you inherit property outside of Nevada
- Available options if you inherit property outside of Nevada
- Avoid being mislead by common estate planning myths
- Avoid euthanasia by including your much-loved pet in a trust
- Avoiding common estate planning mistakes
- Avoiding estate plan failures
- Avoiding mistakes during the estate planning process
- Avoiding probate when transferring real estate
- Avoiding responsibility when acting under a power of attorney
- Avoiding the probate process
- Avoiding trust mistakes in Nevada
- Avoiding will and trust contests
- Balancing interests when managing trusts
- Basketball coach’s will honors his players
- Be careful when choosing the executor of your will
- Be careful! Not everything you own should go into your will
- Becoming a caregiver is a major financial decision
- Becoming an estate administrator when there is no will
- Being appointed as an executor
- Being aware of the potential value of estate planning
- Being in charge of settling a parent’s final affairs
- Being open and objective is important when acting as executor
- Beneficiary designations
- Beneficiary designations can trump bequests
- Beneficiary details matter
- Benefits Of Estate Planning For Same-Sex Couples
- Benefits of living trusts
- Billionaire faces a court battle over mental competency
- Bitcoin and digital assets affect estate planning
- Bobby Vee’s family in estate dispute
- Boomers and their inheritances: Planning for the next generation
- Bring up estate planning after a loved one’s dementia diagnosis
- Business owners and estate planning
- Can a child be held responsible for a parent’s debts after death?
- Can estate planning be affordable?
- Can heirs count on wills or trusts for retirement income?
- Can my grandchildren benefit from a trust?
- Can you use your estate plan to promote education?
- Can your estate plan benefit from a “Titanic clause?”
- Can your estate plan benefit from an advance medical directive?
- Can your leave your home in a 55+ community to your loved ones?
- Careful consideration crucial when choosing powers of attorney
- Careful record keeping and patience benefit executor of will
- Carrie Fisher’s executor asks to distribute assets
- Celebrities and estate planning mistakes
- Celebrities who did not leave estate plans
- Celebrity estate planning
- Celebrity examples show importance of estate planning
- Certain life events are inevitable. Will your estate be prepared?
- Challenging powers of attorney for incapacitated people
- Changes an estate plan may need after divorce
- Changing tax laws have changed estate planning
- Changing the terms of a will in Nevada
- Check out our TV appearance on ABC – Channel 13 – Morning Blend
- Choosing a guardian for your young children
- Choosing a trust over a will
- Choosing an executor plays significant estate planning role
- Choosing an executor under a will
- Choosing and including beneficiaries in estate planning goals
- Choosing professionals instead of family to manage a legacy
- Choosing who will manage estate affairs
- Clear end-of-life instructions are invaluable to family members
- Clergy procrastinates estate planning decisions
- Common and avoidable estate planning issues
- Common estate planning errors that should be avoided
- Common misconceptions about the probate process
- Common misconceptions about trusts
- Common misconceptions regarding powers of attorney
- Common mistakes executors of wills should avoid
- Communication can be a key part to estate planning
- Communication can help avoid common estate planning issues
- Comparing the benefits of wills and trusts
- Complex circumstances require careful will planning
- Complications arising from John Singleton’s outdated will
- Concerns regarding assets during the probate process
- Conflict inside families over inheritance on the rise, some say
- Consider your digital assets in your estate plan
- Considerations in writing a will
- Considerations when creating an estate plan
- Considerations when starting the estate planning process
- Considering establishing an education trust
- Constructive trust addresses potential estate-related problems
- Contesting wills in Nevada
- Could an ILIT protect your life insurance proceeds from taxation?
- Could you receive a copy of your loved one’s will?
- Creating a comprehensive estate plan in Nevada
- Creating a pet trust to protect pets
- Creating a rationale for an estate plan
- Creating a trust for educational purposes
- Creating a trust to benefit adult children
- Creating a will does not have to be a complicated process
- Creating a will that won’t trigger conflict
- Creating an estate plan in a blended family
- Creating an estate plan when a person has a chronic illness
- Creating an estate plan when your child is an addict
- Creating an estate plan without a spouse’s cooperation
- Creditors claims, tax issues may affect Epstein estate
- Cryonics and the use of a revival trust
- Cryptocurrency and its place in estate planning
- Dealing with a house in probate
- Dealing with a poor estate executor
- Dealing with debt as an estate executor
- Death not the only factor when designing an estate plan
- Deciding whether a trust should be part of an estate plan
- Decision reached in case involving Farrah Fawcett’s will
- Designating a power of attorney
- Details to include in your will to streamline the probate process
- Determining if a living will is needed in an estate plan
- Determining the lifespan of a trust
- Determining what’s fair when dividing assets
- Different forms of power of attorney
- Different options for passing on your estate
- Different types of trust fund for different needs
- Digital accounts and estate planning
- Digital assets and estate planning
- Digital assets and estate planning
- Digital assets and estate planning
- Digital assets in an estate plan
- Digital legacies in estate planning
- Digital wills in Nevada
- Disadvantages of a SPOA trust
- Disclaimers in estate planning
- Discovering undisclosed assets when a loved one passes away
- Discussing inheritances could prevent future problems
- Dispute over late performer’s estate continues among her heirs
- Do you feel ready to appoint a power of attorney agent?
- Do you get your inheritance if your parents don’t have a will?
- Do you have the duty of administering a loved one’s trust?
- Do you know which assets are subject to probate?
- Do you need additions to your existing estate plan?
- Does an electronic will count as a valid will?
- Does every adult really need their own estate plan?
- Does life insurance go through probate?
- Does the state of Nevada require a trust to be notarized?
- Does your estate plan include your pet?
- Does your trust-based estate plan need a pour-over will?
- Doesn’t your will handle everything after death? Not necessarily
- Don’t forget about your digital life when making estate plans
- Don’t appoint a relative as trustee for a spendthrift trust
- Don’t remove items from a home before probate
- Drafting a will is essential for parents
- Durable financial power of attorney and estate planning
- During which life stages could an estate plan prove crucial?
- Dust off your estate plan and give it a once over periodically
- Duties involved with trust administration
- Duties of a trustee
- Dying without a will in Nevada
- Dynasty trusts can protect family assets for centuries to come
- E-wills offer convenience but may have risks
- Effectiveness of a power of attorney upon a move
- Effects of tax law changes on irrevocable life insurance trusts
- Entering the initial stages of estate planning
- Establishing a durable power of attorney for health care
- Establishing a power of attorney now is usually a good idea
- Establishing a special needs trust
- Establishing a trust for your special needs child
- Establishing guardianship for future contingencies
- Establishing Security By Creating A Will
- Establishing trusts for special needs individuals
- Estate disputes following death can be curbed with good planning
- Estate issues and the death of David Bowie
- Estate plan tips for single parents
- Estate planning advice in the new year
- Estate planning after an Alzheimer’s diagnosis
- Estate planning and digital assets
- Estate planning and discussing goals with the kids
- Estate planning and divorce
- Estate planning and fiduciary responsibility
- Estate planning and funding a trust
- Estate planning and passing assets to loved ones
- Estate Planning and Prenuptial Agreements
- Estate planning and subsequent marriages
- Estate planning and the benefits of health care directives
- Estate planning and the fear of playing favorites
- Estate planning and types of trusts
- Estate planning and why it is important
- Estate planning as an entrepreneur
- Estate planning assists in preparing for the unexpected
- Estate planning before a second marriage
- Estate planning beyond the will
- Estate planning can be critical for business futures
- Estate planning can help avoid later difficulties
- Estate planning changes after divorce later in life
- Estate planning considerations in Nevada
- Estate planning could help limit unexpected outcomes
- Estate planning crucial for family farms and ranches in Nevada
- Estate planning for art collectors
- Estate planning for blended families
- Estate planning for business owners
- Estate planning for childless couples
- Estate planning for couples with no children
- Estate planning for deaths in quick succession
- Estate planning for everyone
- Estate planning for parents with children who have special needs
- Estate planning for someone with money and without heirs
- Estate planning for young people in Nevada
- Estate planning in case of becoming incapacitated
- Estate planning in light of tax law changes
- Estate planning in Nevada involves more that just money
- Estate planning in nontraditional families
- Estate planning is a must for asset protection
- Estate planning is crucial regardless of the size of the estate
- Estate planning is especially important for unmarried couples
- Estate planning is for every Nevada resident
- Estate planning is important for all Nevada adults
- Estate planning is important for everyone
- Estate planning lessons to be learned from Lee Radziwill
- Estate planning mistakes Nevada residents should avoid
- Estate planning myths debunked
- Estate planning options for couples without children
- Estate planning options for small business owners
- Estate planning options for the various phases of life
- Estate planning protects assets and relationships
- Estate planning requirements differ based on U.S. citizenship
- Estate planning steps after entering a 2nd marriage
- Estate planning the right way
- Estate planning tips for Nevada residents
- Estate planning tips for new parents
- Estate planning tips for retirees
- Estate planning tips for special needs families
- Estate planning tips to prevent conflict
- Estate planning tools 101: FAQs about intra-family loans
- Estate planning topics for those in retirement
- Estate planning topics for those with foreign possessions
- Estate planning when there’s no children
- Estate planning when you’ve had a falling out with your child
- Estate planning with tax considerations
- Estate planning with the presence of a serious health condition
- Estate planning: Common causes for hesitation
- Estate planning: Here’s why many people hesitate
- Estate planning: Identifying all assets and any potential risks
- Estate planning: Knowing the differences between wills and trusts
- Estate planning: learning from Phillip Seymour Hoffman
- Estate planning: Possible options for avoiding probate
- Estate planning: Protecting one’s wishes by planning ahead
- Estate planning: Safeguarding the interests of beneficiaries
- Estate planning: Speaking with one’s parents about the future
- Estate planning: Steps to take after a parent passes on
- Estate plans and the Build Back Better Act
- Estate plans can change along with tax laws
- Estate plans could include frequent flyer miles and reward points
- Estate plans cover a multitude of wishes
- Estate plans for all income levels
- Estate plans must carefully consider valuable collectibles
- Estate plans require periodic follow ups
- Estate plans should include pet care arrangements
- Estate plans that prepare for incapacity
- Estate tax exemption rises in 2015
- Events that should trigger a review of estate plans
- Everyone needs a will
- Executor responsibilities
- Executors may have unique tasks for wine collections
- Executors must avoid these errors
- Expecting your first child? It’s time for some estate planning
- Explaining the executor’s role
- Explaining will plans to heirs
- Facebook introduces new option for profiles after death
- Factors to consider when writing a will
- Famed singer Aretha Franklin dies without a will
- Family communication important in estate planning
- Family disputes are common even with estate plans
- Family disputes common when bequests are unequal
- Federal laws prompt estate plan changes
- Filing your living will with Nevada’s Lockbox
- Final arrangement plans need not be included in will
- Foreign wills in Nevada courts
- Forming a strategy for the beginning stages of estate planning
- Garnished savings become court case for Las Vegas children
- Getting personal affairs in order in Nevada
- Gift giving to reduce estate tax
- Gift tax considerations and estate planning trusts
- Gifting mistakes to avoid
- Gifting rules and powers of attorney in Nevada
- Gifts to a trust could help with tax obligations
- Going to probate isn’t necessarily a bad thing
- Granting power of attorney can make final affairs easier
- Gross estate and taxes
- Grounds for challenging a will
- Guidelines for naming people to roles in will planning
- Handling an estate after one spouse dies
- Handling an inheritance amid resentful family members
- Handling debts after a person passes
- Handling debts after death in Nevada
- Handling final requests
- Handling inheritance issues in Nevada
- Have you checked on your beneficiary designations lately?
- Having a will makes arrangements for the future
- Health care estate planning for young adults
- Health care powers of attorney can aid decision-making
- Health care powers of attorney can be a gift for your family
- Heirs sell large private citrus company after tax code change
- Helping angel investors keep more of their money
- Helping people to create wills and set up trusts
- Hoffman estate left to mother of his children
- How a charitable split-interest trust works
- How a spendthrift trust works
- How a trust and a will could complement each other
- How a will is contested
- How an estate pays off its debts
- How an estate plan can reflect your values
- How an estate tax repeal might affect planning
- How an incentive trust works
- How an IRA trust can protect assets
- How and when is it possible to avoid the probate process?
- How angel investors can pass on wealth in trusts
- How beneficiaries can effectively work with trustees
- How can a trust protect my family?
- How can an executor protect a deceased loved one’s assets?
- How can spending your money help you get free healthcare?
- How can working with a Certified Financial Planner lead to a solid estate plan?
- How can you ensure assets you leave will last?
- How celebrity deaths show the importance of estate planning
- How charitable trusts differ from other types of trusts
- How do executors provide creditors with notice of the estate?
- How do I appoint a guardian for my child?
- How do retirement accounts factor into estate planning?
- How do you know when it’s time to update your will?
- How families can protect their wealth
- How families can talk about estate planning
- How family dynamics can complicate estate planning
- How income generated by a trust is taxed
- How life insurance fits in an estate plan
- How living wills benefit all adults
- How long do creditors have to bring claims against an estate?
- How long will probate take?
- How many Americans have comprehensive estate plans?
- How many wills can you make?
- How much does it cost for an estate to go through probate court?
- How Nevada residents can protect digital content after death
- How politics can influence estate planning
- How should you fund your living trust?
- How special needs trusts work
- How the cy pres doctrine affects charitable trusts
- How the estate tax exemption may affect estate planning
- How the SECURE Act could affect estate plans
- How to account for digital assets in an estate plan
- How to account for the SECURE Act
- How to address your timeshare in your estate planning
- How to amend a trust
- How to avoid common estate plan issues
- How to avoid probate
- How to avoid probate court in Nevada
- How to be the executor of a parent’s will
- How to benefit from a life estate
- How to choose a beneficiary
- How to choose people for roles in an estate plan
- How to correct estate planning problems
- How to create a do-over trust
- How to create a trust for a beneficiary with an addiction
- How to create a will in Nevada
- How to create an estate plan for digital assets
- How to cut someone out of an estate plan
- How to establish a legacy of giving
- How to establish a trust fund
- How to give the gift of estate planning
- How to handle an executor who breaches his or her duties
- How to handle an unfunded trust
- How to handle direct inheritances to minors
- How to keep an estate out of probate
- How to limit or avoid state estate taxes
- How to make an estate plan for digital assets
- How to manage estate plans in a blended family
- How to preserve powers of attorney
- How to preserve wealth for future generations
- How to protect an inheritance from a spouse
- How to show love through an estate plan
- How to talk to your aging parents about estate planning
- How trusts can be versatile estate planning tools
- How will a minor child receive their inheritance after your passing?
- How wills factor into an estate plan
- If an estate has debt, do heirs need to pay?
- If I make a will, is that my estate planning complete?
- If you get divorced, check your estate plan
- Importance of regular reviews of estate plans and wills
- Importance of thoughtful planning in the event of incapacitation
- Important aspects of estate planning
- Important considerations when creating a special needs trust
- Important issues to address during estate planning
- Important steps for powers of attorney
- Important tips for getting started on estate planning
- Incentive trusts may enrich your estate
- Including digital assets in an estate plan
- Including digital assets in estate planning goals
- Including lifetime gifting in estate planning strategies
- Including pets in an estate plan
- Incorporating digital assets into an estate plan
- Inheritance protection v. legal venues
- Insufficient estate planning can cause family drama
- IRAs and custom beneficiary designations
- Is a joint tenancy with an heir a good idea to avoid probate?
- Is adding a living trust to your estate plan right for you?
- Is an estate plan really that necessary?
- Is it time to update your will?
- Is it too early to start thinking about estate planning?
- Is probate necessary for your loved one’s estate?
- Is the will you created in another state valid here in Nevada?
- Is there anything you should avoid putting in a will?
- Is your estate plan complete?
- Issues that can upend estate planning
- Issues to consider when amending a trust
- Items that can be inadvertently missed in a will
- Items to cover while reviewing an estate plan
- Judge gives Robin Williams’ feuding widow and children deadline
- Keep estates organized
- Key devices used in estate planning
- Key differences between wills and trusts
- Know these terms when you’re creating an estate plan
- Knowing one’s options and what to expect from the probate process
- Knowing the topics to address when writing a will
- Knowing when to update estate planning documents
- Law places restrictions on use of estate funds by executor
- Learning about charitable trusts
- Learning the details of Prince’s estate
- Leaving a legacy with a charitable remainder trust
- Leaving different estate shares to different children
- Legacies in an estate plan
- Legal considerations when creating spendthrift trusts
- Lessons learned from celebrity estate plans
- Let your estate plan evolve along with your life
- Letters of final wishes can comfort and help families
- Letting heirs know where to find estate planning documents
- Liability for credit card debt when cardholder dies
- Life insurance trusts and estate planning in Nevada
- Like Prince and Snoop Dog, most Americans do not have a will
- Living trust can assist with estate planning
- Living trusts are not always ideal
- Living trusts offer advantages over traditional wills
- Living wills make wishes known in case of incapacity
- Luke Perry had the foresight to create an estate plan
- Maintaining relationships through estate planning
- Major Nevada estate planning mistake easily avoided
- Major tasks for the executor of the estate
- Making sure that a person’s final wishes are honored
- Making the most of contributions to college savings plans
- Making timely decisions about power of attorney duties
- Managing an inheritance
- Managing IRAs in estate planning
- Many people lack basic estate planning documents
- Millennials largely don’t have wills yet
- Millennials may want to plan for incapacitation
- Minimizing taxes with a Qualified Personal Residence Trust
- Misconceptions about the estate planning process
- Mistakes in estate plans
- Mistakes Nevada executors may make
- Mistakes to avoid in estate planning
- Mistakes to avoid when creating an estate plan
- Mistakes when drafting a will
- Mistakes with beneficiaries could cause issues
- Mistakes with estate planning
- Mistakes with your estate plan can cost you more than money
- More parents leaving children unequal inheritance
- More people include pets in their last will and testament
- More states permit asset-protection trusts
- Most Americans have avoided estate planning
- Multiple marriages and estate planning priorities
- Naming a replacement after a trustee passes away
- Navigating through the probate process
- Nevada estate planning: Which documents should you incorporate?
- Nevada executors may have to search for assets
- Nevada power of attorney basics
- Nevada power of attorney requirements
- Nevada residents may be able to forego probate
- Nevada trustee services
- Nevada’s favorable trust laws
- New law could impact how estate plans are structured
- New proposal could impact Nevada estate taxes
- Newlywed estate planning
- One child may need a trust while siblings don’t
- Online accounts and estate planning
- Opting for flexibility in a trust
- Options exist for avoiding estate taxes
- Out of sight out of mind, not the best policy for estate plans
- Over half of Prince’s estate will go to taxes
- Overview of a trust
- Paralyzed hunter has mental capacity to end life support
- Passing on a sense of values to heirs
- Passing your values on
- Perpetuity and the charitable trust
- Picking the right trustee is important
- Picking your medical power of attorney? Here’s where to start
- Pitfalls of do-it-yourself estate planning
- Planned giving as part of an estate plan
- Planning for incapacity as part of an estate plan
- Planning for long-term care without family
- Planning for the future at every stage of life
- Planning to give with charitable remainder trusts
- Points to keep in mind when preparing a will
- Possible benefits of estate planning early in life
- Possible responsibilities for financial powers of attorney
- Posthumous handling of an heir’s inheritance
- Potential estate planning risks associated with online wills
- Potential pitfalls of naming family members as trustees
- Pour-over wills and trusts
- Power of attorney allows you more control over your future
- Power of attorney and the possibility of coercion
- Power of attorney can allow someone to handle financial matters
- Power of attorney is an essential estate planning tool
- Power of attorney: the benefits and ways to minimize risk
- Powers of attorney and trusts
- Powers of attorney available to Nevada residents
- Powers of attorney essential prior to Alzheimer’s diagnosis
- Powers of attorney important in an estate plan
- Powers of attorney may require periodic updates
- Powers of attorney serve important estate planning functions
- Powers of attorney: What you should know when making your estate plans
- Preparation is needed when it comes to estate planning
- Preparing for estate planning by taking inventory of assets
- Preparing to write a will by overcoming hesitation
- Preserving family wealth through dynasty trusts
- Preventing estate battles over tangible items
- Preventing fights about a parent’s estate
- Prince’s estate valued at approximately $200 million
- Prioritizing an update to an estate plan
- Pro and cons of online estate planning documents
- Probate assets could impact how you plan
- Probate has to be opened where the deceased owned property
- Probate litigation: Do you have legitimate cause to challenge a will?
- Problems that arise in estate planning with blended families
- Properly changing a trust document
- Pros and cons of a Nevada trust
- Pros and cons of irrevocable trusts
- Protect digital assets
- Protecting a business through estate planning
- Protecting a family member with an addiction in estate planning
- Protecting an estate plan from legal challenges
- Protecting assets after divorce action
- Protecting assets for heirs
- Protecting assets now so you can avoid a dispute in the future
- Protecting one’s interests with a health care power of attorney
- Protecting your family business after death
- Providing for a loved one via a special needs trust
- Providing for children with a special needs trust
- Providing for pets in an estate plan
- Providing for your pets in your estate plan
- Questions to ask before leaving a vacation home to heirs
- Questions to ask your estate planning attorney
- Questions to ask your estate planning attorney
- Reading of wills no longer required by states
- Reasons an estate plan may need updating
- Reasons to designate a trust protector
- Reasons to have a pour-over will
- Reasons to review trusts regularly
- Reasons to use a trust for adult children
- Reasons why a trust may be a good option
- Reasons why millennials should look into estate planning
- Reconsider using a safe deposit box to store your estate plans
- Reducing stress through estate planning
- Refining one’s strategy for the future through estate planning
- Remarriage threatens estate planning
- Reports say Anderson Cooper set to inherit $1.5 million
- Retirement accounts never go through probate. Right? Wrong
- Reviewing estate planning goals after a divorce
- Revisiting one’s estate planning needs
- Revocable living trusts in Nevada
- Revoking or changing a will
- Revoking powers of attorney in Nevada
- Rights to willed assets
- Robin Williams’ 3 children to inherit actor’s estate
- Roth IRAs and probate
- Same-sex couples and estate planning
- Save some space in your will for Mittens or Fido
- Saving for college through estate planning
- Scenarios in which retirement accounts may be subject to probate
- Second marriages and estate planning in Nevada
- Second marriages complicate estate plans
- Seeking advice on what a trust has to offer
- Seeking advice on what estate planning has to offer
- Selecting a trustee for a trust
- Selecting the right person to serve in role of power-of-attorney
- Selling a home after the death of a loved one
- Selling a home during the probate process
- Sentimental value and estate planning
- Setting up a health care power of attorney in Nevada
- Should children know what they’re going to inherit when you die?
- Should I involve my family in estate planning?
- Should people have more than one trust?
- Should you “disclaim” an inheritance you don’t want?
- Should you discuss estate planning with your aging parents?
- Should you discuss your estate plan with your children?
- Should you include a no contest clause in your will?
- Should you include a Power of Attorney in your estate plan?
- Should you sell your home before you die to avoid probate?
- Should you set up an irrevocable life insurance plan?
- Simple estate planning mistakes could have major consequences
- Simplifying an executor’s job
- Singe people face challenges with estate planning
- Single people must plan their estates, too
- Social media and estate planning
- Specialized domestic trusts can function like offshore accounts
- Speculation on writer Harper Lee’s estate plan
- Spendthrift trust creation in Nevada
- Start estate planning by inventorying your assets
- Staying away from drunk drivers
- Stepping up as a successor trustee
- Steps after receiving an inheritance
- Steps to take in order to set up a special needs trust
- Strategies to reduce taxes in estate planning
- Suddenly incapacitated? Have these documents in your estate plan
- Suitable trusts for higher interest rates
- Surtax imposed on investment income of trusts and estates
- Surviving the Nevada probate process
- Taking care of your loved ones is not a DIY project
- Taking steps to limit estate planning conflict
- Tax law changes could affect charitable giving
- Tenancy options for a shared property
- Termination of a power of attorney
- The 5 biggest celebrity estate planning disasters
- The advantages of a power of attorney
- The basics of an irrevocable life insurance trust (ILIT)
- The basics of using a will in Nevada estate planning
- The benefits of a micro estate plan
- The benefits of a silent trust
- The benefits of a spendthrift trust
- The benefits of estate planning
- The benefits of having a living will
- The benefits of naming a trustee from outside the family
- The benefits of using a trust for children
- The best tip for bringing up estate planning
- The complexities of trust administration
- The creation of a trust
- The different types of powers of attorney
- The DIY approach to estate planning is not the best option
- The duty to account in a power of attorney designation
- The earlier estate planning happens, the better
- The enforcement of trusts
- The estate planning documents even college students need
- The estate planning process can lead to questions
- The executor’s role
- The first steps of the estate planning process
- The importance of a power of attorney
- The importance of a special needs trust
- The importance of a will with a living trust
- The importance of accessing online passwords
- The importance of beneficiary designations
- The importance of communication in estate planning
- The importance of drafting an estate plan
- The importance of estate planning for business owners
- The importance of estate planning for small business owners
- The importance of estate planning in Nevada
- The importance of frequent reviews of your estate plan
- The importance of health care directives
- The importance of hiring an attorney to help plan your estate
- The importance of living wills and powers of attorney
- The importance of passing on knowledge
- The importance of planning who will inherit property
- The importance of powers of attorney
- The importance of powers of attorney in Nevada
- The importance of updating beneficiary designations
- The influence of step-up in cost basis on inheritance
- The multiple benefits of an estate plan
- The need to review and update wills
- The new year is the perfect time to review your estate plan
- The often-ignored risks of DIY estate planning
- The possible consequences of choosing not to create a will
- The potential pitfalls of a simple will when children come along
- The potential pitfalls of a template estate plan
- The power of attorney and other estate planning considerations
- The probate system and distributing an estate
- The process of trust decanting
- The pros and cons of a trust in Nevada
- The responsibilities of estate administration
- The risk of going it alone with estate planning
- The role of a will in an estate plan
- The role of a will in Nevada
- The role of probate in estate administration
- The role of the public administrator in Nevada
- The role of trusts in estate planning
- The thrill is gone as King estate disputes begin in Nevada courts
- The top must-have financial planning documents
- The use of a trust for pets
- The use of community property trusts
- The use of trusts for estate planning needs
- The uses of a funeral trust
- The uses of a revocable trust
- The uses of a trust in an estate plan
- The uses of trusts and trust modifications
- The validity of an electronic will
- The value of being thorough with estate planning objectives
- The value of trusts in Nevada
- There are several kinds of irrevocable trusts
- Things to consider when choosing an executor for a will
- Things to think about when handling estate planning
- Think about estate planning now
- Thinking beyond usual Nevada estate planning options
- Three common applications for trusts in estate planning
- Tips for avoiding common estate planning mistakes
- Tips for choosing a trustee
- Tips for choosing the right person as estate executor
- Tips for leaving a legacy
- Tips for making an estate plan better
- Tips for planning your will
- Tips for preventing exploitation of older adults
- Tips for resolving probate problems with siblings
- Tips for revising an estate plan throughout a person’s life
- Tips for talking about inheritances
- Tips for updating an estate plan
- Tips for writing a will
- Tips to avoid mismanaging an inheritance
- Tips to help families create an estate plan
- Tips to help Nevada residents with estate planning
- Tom Petty’s widow and daughters battle over his estate
- Tom Petty’s widow in probate battle with his daughter
- Top tip for future financial security: Get an estate plan
- Topics to address when setting up a trust for a minor
- Troublesome heirs: A guide for executors
- Trust options that could help protect one’s assets
- Trust planning can avoid problems in transferring assets
- Trust planning can protect assets and provide privacy
- Trust planning for educational expenses
- Trust planning may help keep creditors away from your estate
- Trust planning: an essential part of estate planning
- Trustee responsibility for debts and expenses
- Trustee services for Nevada residents
- Trusts can be a better option for gifts to adult children
- Trusts can help protect estates from tax
- Trusts can prevent estate planning headaches
- Trusts may be preferable to wills for family privacy
- Trusts may not be enough to protect assets from creditors
- Trusts offer estate planning help for many
- Trusts provide versatile tools for transferring wealth
- Trusts should be revoked by their own terms
- Trusts that may save money for grantors or beneficiaries
- Turmoil of two wills: deal will split heiress’s estate
- Understanding charitable remainder trusts in Nevada
- Understanding irrevocable trusts
- Understanding medical and financial powers of attorney
- Understanding the need to update an estate plan
- Understanding the options prior to setting up a trust
- Understanding the probate process
- Understanding what happens to a person’s debts when they die
- Understanding wills in Nevada
- Unless you execute a plan, you can’t choose an estate heir
- Unmarried couples benefit from estate planning
- Unmarried couples possess estate planning options
- Unraveling false ideas concerning probate
- Updating estate planning goals after becoming a parent
- Updating the terms of a trust that has already become irrevocable
- Updating wills can prevent flaws in estate administration
- Updating your estate plan after divorce may prove wise
- Use of out-of-state trusts to reduce tax burdens
- Uses of a living revocable trust
- Using a durable financial power of attorney in estate planning
- Using a family trust to secure wealth
- Using a qualified personal residence trust
- Using a qualified personal residence trust
- Using a spendthrift trust to manage family members’ inheritances
- Using a TOD deed to avoid probate
- Using a trust in an estate plan
- Using an estate account during probate
- Using multiple trusts
- Using revocable living trusts
- Using revocable trusts
- Using the professional in estate planning
- Using trusts as IRA beneficiaries
- Using trusts as part of an estate plan
- Using trusts to place conditions on inheriting assets
- Using trusts to reduce estate taxes
- Value of estate determines form of probate
- Various types of trusts for Nevada residents to consider
- Ways to provide care for pets after passing on
- Ways to use estate plans
- We help you to avoid the one-size-fits-all estate protection
- Weighing the possible benefits of a spendthrift trust
- What a personal representative is responsible for
- What actually happens during the probate process?
- What are digital assets and why are they important to my heirs?
- What are grounds to challenge a will in Nevada?
- What are some mistakes to avoid when writing a will?
- What are some non-conflict factors that may slow down the probate process?
- What are the benefits of having a revocable trust?
- What are the common responsibilities of an executor?
- What are the common steps to create a will?
- What are the differences between a living trust and a will?
- What are the different types of trusts?
- What are the disadvantages of probate?
- What are the rules covering the sale of estate assets in Nevada?
- What attributes should you avoid when picking your estate’s executor?
- What can an educational trust provide?
- What can you do if you inherit property in Nevada but live elsewhere?
- What can’t I include in my estate plan?
- What debts will a Nevada executor have to pay from the estate?
- What does it mean to fund a trust?
- What does Nevada law say about wills?
- What does real estate mean for estate administration in Nevada?
- What estate executors should expect
- What estate planning can do for your young children
- What happens if a will is destroyed?
- What happens if I die without making a will?
- What happens if someone dies with their estate in the red?
- What happens if your loved one died without a will?
- What happens in the probate process
- What happens to assets if a beneficiary dies first
- What happens when a beneficiary dies before estate administration?
- What happens when a person dies with debt
- What is a holographic will under Nevada law?
- What is a holographic will?
- What is a letter of testamentary and why do I need one?
- What is a letter of testamentary, and do you need one?
- What is a power of attorney?
- What is a spendthrift trust?
- What is the “equal dignities rule?”
- What is the purpose of a living will and why should you have one?
- What is the purpose of a trust?
- What is your fiduciary duty as executor of an estate?
- What not to omit from a will
- What objectives could your estate plan help you achieve?
- What people should know about family members contesting a will
- What percentage of people choose to have living trusts versus wills?
- What role do digital assets play in estate planning?
- What should you consider when choosing a trustee?
- What taxes may need to be paid after someone dies?
- What to consider when choosing an estate representative
- What to consider when writing a will
- What to expect as an estate executor
- What to know about being an executor
- What to know about choosing a trustee
- What to know about inheriting timeshares
- What to know about wills and probate
- What to look for in a power of attorney
- What type of information could you include in a living will?
- What you need to know about tax laws and estate planning
- What young people should know about their inheritance
- What’s holding you back when it comes to estate planning?
- When a person should create or update a will
- When a will is not enough
- When can the executor use estate funds for expenses?
- When does an executor have to file a tax return for the estate?
- When should you hire a probate attorney?
- When should you update an estate plan?
- When was the last time you updated your estate plan?
- When wills are necessary
- Where will your assets go if you die intestate?
- Who can witness your Nevada will?
- Who gets the house?
- Who inherits credit card debt when the cardholder dies?
- Who is preparing the living trust and other documents?
- Who pays outstanding bills from an estate?
- Who will make medical decisions if I am too ill to do so myself?
- Who will raise your child if you pass away?
- Why a married person may need powers of attorney
- Why a trust may be a better choice than a will
- Why a will matters even for people without heirs
- Why a will may be challenged
- Why and how to set up a spendthrift trust
- Why are you hesitating to make your estate plan?
- Why couples without kids need estate plans
- Why estate planning is always worthwhile
- Why estate planning matters
- Why estate planning matters for adults of all ages
- Why estate plans are important in blended families
- Why having a will is important
- Why individuals should consider a DAPT
- Why is Nevada good for trusts?
- Why it is vital to update a will
- Why it’s important for estates to have contigency plans
- Why it’s important to have a will
- Why married people should have powers of attorney
- Why married people still need powers of attorney
- Why might probate take longer than you think?
- Why name a trust as an IRA beneficiary?
- Why parents may want to consider a trust instead of a will
- Why parents should consider special needs trusts
- Why people may want trusts as the beneficiaries for IRAs
- Why should I consider a special needs trust?
- Why should you consider a living trust?
- Why should you consider options for reducing estate taxes?
- Why should you revisit estate planning as you prepare to remarry for the second time?
- Why the childless need estate plans too
- Why to choose a trust
- Why wills are important for everyone
- Will assets in a trust be subject to taxes?
- Will I be reimbursed for executing an estate?
- Will planning and preparation requires attention to detail
- Will planning is important even for those without children
- Will planning should include digital assets
- Will you have to handle your loved one’s debts during probate?
- Will your assets be subject to estate taxes after you die?
- Will your estate need to go through ancillary probate?
- Will your estate plan need to include a pour-over will?
- Will your Nevada estate planning documents expire?
- Wills can be a touchy subject
- Wills may be useful for many people
- Wills may help avoid some inheritance issues
- Woman’s destruction of fortune teaches estate planning lesson
- Writing a will for a blended family
- Writing a will in Nevada
- You have created a trust. Now, how do you administer it?
- You may want to add one more document to your estate plan
- Young adult estate planning surged in 2020
- Young people can benefit from estate planning
- Your estate plan could help surviving family avoid issues
- Your parent died without a will. What happens now?
- Your plan or the state’s: That is the question
- Your POA agent cannot handle your Social Security benefits