Trusts and Your Estate Plan

How We Help You Build a Complete Estate Plan

We help you create a comprehensive estate plan tailored to your specific needs, goals, and family situation. Our team works closely with you to develop customized solutions, including wills, trusts, powers of attorney, and health care directives.

Estate planning is not just about documents—it’s about protecting your assets, preserving your legacy, and ensuring your loved ones are cared for with clarity and confidence.

Why a Trust Matters

 

Why Your Estate Plan Should Be Personalized

No two families are the same, and your estate plan should reflect that.

We take the time to understand your priorities, your concerns, and your long-term vision. From there, we design a strategy that protects your assets, maintains your privacy, and ensures your wishes are carried out exactly as intended.

 

 

Untitled design(1)

What Is Estate Planning and Why Does It Matter?

Estate planning is the process of preparing for how your assets and responsibilities will be managed during your lifetime and after your death.

Your estate includes everything you own—your savings, investments, real estate, business interests, personal property, and even provisions for your loved ones and pets.

Without a proper estate plan, the state may decide how your assets are distributed through intestate succession laws, which rarely reflect your true intentions. A well-structured plan ensures that your wishes are honored while minimizing legal complications for your family.

 

Why Trusts Are Essential in Estate Planning

A trust is one of the most effective tools available to protect your assets and provide clear instructions for the future.

At its core, a trust is a legal arrangement that allows you to place assets into a structured plan—ensuring they are managed and distributed according to your wishes. Think of it as a secure “container” that holds and protects your wealth for your beneficiaries.

Unlike a will, a trust can help avoid the probate process, maintain privacy, and provide greater control over how and when your assets are distributed.

Key Benefits of a Trust

  • Avoid Probate: Streamline asset distribution and reduce legal delays
  • Maintain Privacy: Keep your financial matters out of public court records
  • Protect Beneficiaries: Set conditions to safeguard children or loved ones
  • Plan for Incapacity: Ensure your assets are managed if you cannot make decisions
  • Minimize Estate Taxes: Preserve more wealth for your family
  • Support Special Needs Planning: Protect benefits eligibility for loved ones
  • Prepare for Long-Term Care: Help structure assets for Medicaid planning

Are Estate Plans Necessary For Everybody?

Do You Need a Trust or a Will?

A will and a trust serve different but complementary purposes in an estate plan.

A will outlines how your assets should be distributed after your death, but it must go through probate—a public legal process that can be time-consuming and costly.

A trust, on the other hand, allows your assets to bypass probate, offering more privacy, efficiency, and control.

In many cases, the most effective estate plan includes both a will and one or more trusts. An experienced estate planning attorney can help determine the right combination based on your goals.

Types of Trusts We Help You Establish

We design and implement a wide range of trusts to meet different needs and goals, including:

  • Revocable Living Trust
  • Irrevocable Trust
  • Joint Trust
  • Spendthrift Trust
  • Medicaid Trust
  • Special Needs Trust
  • Testamentary Trust
  • Land Trust

Each type of trust serves a specific purpose, and selecting the right one depends on your financial situation, family structure, and long-term objectives.

When Should You Update Your Estate Plan?

Estate planning is not a one-time event—it should evolve as your life changes.

You should review and update your plan when:

  • You get married or divorced
  • You have children or grandchildren
  • You acquire new assets or a business
  • Your financial situation changes
  • You move to a new state

Keeping your estate plan up to date ensures it continues to reflect your wishes and protects your family effectively.

 

Our Proven 5-Step Estate Planning Process

We make the estate planning process simple, clear, and personalized:

  1. Initial Consultation: We learn about your goals, family, and concerns
  2. Strategy Development: We design a plan tailored to your needs
  3. Plan Creation: We prepare all legal documents with precision
  4. Review & Signing: We guide you through every detail for full clarity
  5. Ongoing Support: We help you update your plan as life changes

Our goal is not just to create documents, but to give you peace of mind.

Links and Resources

You Can Give Away More Tax Free in 2018

By Andrea Jakob | December 27, 2019

After staying the same for five years, the amount you can give away to any one individual in a particular year without reporting the gift will increase in 2018. The annual gift tax exclusion for 2018 is rising from $14,000 to $15,000. This means that any person who gives away $15,000 or less to any…

Wealth vs. Health

By Andrea Jakob | December 27, 2019

I came across this great article in Forbes’ Wells Fargo Voice from last month written by Alice Lesch Kelly that I want to share: Wealth Vs. Health: Take A Balanced Approach: (Go to: Forbes for original post, mostly reproduced here). We all need balance in our lives and this article provides some great strategies for…

How Will You Know if Your College- Aged Child is Hurt? HIPAA Laws May Mean You Won’t.

By Andrea Jakob | December 27, 2019

A Little Peace of Mind Goes a Long Way. You’ve tried to prepare them in every way you can for college, but how can you make sure your children will be protected when you’re not around? Are they prepared for a medical emergency? It’s hard to believe, but privacy laws can prevent doctors from discussing…

Use Your Will to Dictate How to Pay Your Debts

By Andrea Jakob | December 27, 2019

The main purpose of a will is to direct where your assets will go after you die, but it can also be used to instruct your heirs how to pay your debts. While generally heirs cannot inherit debt, debt can reduce what they receive. Spelling out how debt should be paid can help your heirs.…

How the Elderly Lose Their Rights!

By Andrea Jakob | December 27, 2019

Guardians can sell the assets and control the lives of senior citizens without their consent – and reap a profit from it. Everyone must read this great article from the October 9, 2017 issue of the New Yorker by Rachel Aviv.  – Click Here for New Yorker Article

Nursing Home Costs Rise Sharply in 2017

By Andrea Jakob | December 27, 2019

The median cost of a private nursing home room in the United States has increased to $97,455 a year, up 5.5 percent from 2016, according to Genworth’s 2017 Cost of Care survey, which the insurer conducts annually. Genworth reports that the median cost of a semi-private room in a nursing home is $85,775, up 4.44…

Now Is the Time to Review Your Medicare Options

By Andrea Jakob | December 26, 2019

Are you happy with your current Medicare plan or plans? Now is the time to think about whether you are in the right plan or whether a new plan could save you money. Medicare’s Open Enrollment Period, in which you can enroll in or switch plans, runs from October 15 to December 7. During this…

How to Reverse Medicare Surcharges When Your Income Changes

By Andrea Jakob | December 11, 2019

What happens if you are a high-income Medicare beneficiary who is paying a surcharge on your premiums and then your income changes? If your circumstances change, you can reverse those surcharges. Higher-income Medicare beneficiaries (individuals who earn more than $85,000) pay higher Part B and prescription drug benefit premiums than lower-income Medicare beneficiaries. The extra…

Digital Assets Raise Estate Planning Questions

By Andrea Jakob | December 11, 2019

More and more, we are conducting our business on the Internet, whether that’s online banking, shopping at Amazon and other sites, uploading documents and files to the “cloud,” posting videos on YouTube, or communicating with high school classmates via Facebook. So, what happens to all of our accounts and files when we become incapacitated or…

Four Provisions People Forget to Include in Their Estate Plan

By Andrea Jakob | December 11, 2019

Even if you’ve created an estate plan, are you sure you included everything you need to? There are certain provisions that people often forget to put in in a will or estate plan that can have a big impact on your family. Alternate Beneficiaries One of the most important things your estate plan should include…

“Leave A Legacy, Not A Mess”

Emerald Publications – September, 2007

Get The Ultimate Life Organizer

There's a lot to think about when you're collecting information for your estate plan. Download our free 17 page Complete Life Organizer and make sure you have everything covered!

jakob-organizer-p1