Proper estate planning will allow you to ensure you are able to control what happens to your assets now and after your gone. It is the best way to ensure your specific wishes are followed rather than hoping the courts make the right choices on your behalf. There are many benefits to estate planning including minimizing the taxes that are owed, maintaining privacy for your estate, helping your loved ones avoid probate court, and much more.
A Will, or Last Will and Testament, is the most basic step in estate planning. It will direct what you want to happen to some, or even all, of your assets upon your death. This is also where you would identify who you want to care for any minor children should you die before they are fully grown. For many younger people, a Will is the only estate planning document they need. No matter how complex your estate plan, however, you’ll almost certainly need to have a Will as a part of it.
A trust is an entity that exists through a private agreement between trustee – a person charged with responsibility to holding property for the benefit of another - and settlor- a person who parts with said property for the benefit of another (or sometimes, for the benefit of self) Different assets can be placed into a trust. There are many different types of trusts, each used to serve a different purpose. Choosing the right trust, or trusts, will help to ensure you reach your goals.