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  • Home
  • Our Firm
    • About Justin Stivers, Esq.
  • Services
    • Estate and Gift Tax Figures
    • Financial Planning Assistance
    • IRA Inheritance Planning
    • Medicaid And Elder Law Services
      • Guardianship for Young Children
      • Options for Paying for Nursing Home Care
    • Minor Children and Young Adult Planning
    • Outdated Estate Planning Documents
    • Pet Planning
    • Powers of Attorney, Healthcare & Emergency Documents
    • Remarriage & Blended Families Protection
    • SECURE Act
    • Special Needs Planning
    • Trust Administration and Probate
    • Wills and Trusts
  • Free Webinars
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    • Relocating To Florida
    • Estate Planning Resources
      • Estate Planning Definitions
      • Is Your Estate Plan Outdated?
      • Reports
      • Top 10 Estate Planning Techniques
    • Elder Law Reports
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      • Estate Planning FAQs
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Probate Avoidance Tools and Strategies

Coral Gables estate planning attorneys

Date: February 10, 2022

Probate Avoidance Tools and Strategies

A common goal found in many comprehensive estate plans is probate avoidance. Avoiding probate entirely may be impossible; however, with some careful planning you can create an estate plan that dramatically reduces the amount of time and money spent on the probate of your estate. That, in turn, may make much needed assets available to loved ones much sooner after your death. The Coral Gables estate planning attorneys at Stivers Law explain some commonly used probate avoidance tools and strategies.

Probate Basics

Over the course of your lifetime, you will acquire numerous assets that make up your “estate.” Your estate may include real or personal property as well as tangible and intangible assets. Upon your death, all those estate assets potentially become part of the probate of your estate. Probate is the legal process that will ultimately transfer your estate assets to the new owners. Avoiding probate is a common estate planning goal for several reasons. First, the terms of your Will become public record during probate. Avoiding probate allows you to keep those details private. Second, probate is time consuming. Probating even a modest and uncomplicated estate can take months. Often, the probate process can take a year or longer, meaning beneficiaries must often wait a long time to receive their intended gifts. Finally, probate can be expensive. Everyone involved in the probate of an estate, including the Executor/PR, attorneys, appraisers, real estate agents, and accountants, is entitled to a fee for their services.

Probate Avoidance: Common Tools and Strategies

The key to diminishing (or even avoiding) the time and expense of probate is to reduce the size, value, and complexity of your probate estate. In other words, the fewer probate assets you own at the time of your death, the better. Five common estate planning tools/strategies to help your estate avoid probate include:

  • Using a trust to distribute estate assets.  Not all assets are required to go through probate. Assets held by a trust, for example, bypass the probate process altogether and can be distributed to beneficiaries as soon after your death as you wish. Using a trust to distribute assets offers other benefits as well, such as the ability to stagger an inheritance instead of leaving a lump sum to a young beneficiary.
  • Lifetime gifting.  Only assets owned by you at the time of your death are potentially subject to going through probate. With that in mind, gifting assets while you are still alive instead of waiting until your death is an excellent probate avoidance strategy. In addition, there are often tax advantages to lifetime gifting that may further benefit your estate.
  • Rights of survivorship. The way assets are titled can also be used to avoid probate. Your interest in your house, for example, could transfer directly to a spouse or adult child after your death if titled properly. Holding the title jointly with rights of survivorship, allows your interest in the property to pass directly to the co-owner upon your death without first going through probate.
  • “Payable on death (POD)” or “transfer on death (TOD).”  Assets held in a financial account, when designated as POD, will automatically become the property of the designated beneficiary upon your death; however, the beneficiary has no legal rights to the assets while you are alive.
  • Life insurance proceeds.  Life insurance proceeds are non-probate assets and, therefore, are paid out directly to the beneficiary after your death. Consider using them to fund a funeral trust which then pays for your funeral.

Contact Coral Gables Estate Planning Attorneys

For more information, please join us for an upcoming FREE webinar. If you have additional questions or concerns about how to incorporate probate avoidance tools and strategies into your estate plan, contact the experienced Coral Gables estate planning attorneys at Stivers Law by calling (305) 456-3255 to schedule an appointment.

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Justin Stivers
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Justin Stivers
Justin helps clients put together unique estate plans, including assistance with Trusts, Wills, Powers of Attorney, and Advance Directives. He also works with clients to set up Special Needs Trusts for their children.

Justin serves as a member of the American Academy of Estate Planning Attorneys (AAEPA), a national organization comprised of legal professionals concentrating on estate planning. As a member of the Academy, he receives ongoing, comprehensive training on modern estate planning techniques.
Justin Stivers
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Latest posts by Justin Stivers (see all)
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Category: Estate Planning

Date: February 10, 2022

Category: Estate Planning

Previous Post: «Coral Gables Medicaid planning attorneys How to Plan for the Possibility You Will Need Long-Term Care
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Stivers Law
110 Merrick Way Suite 2C
Coral Gables, FL 33134
Phone: (305) 456-3255

See Larger Map Get Directions

Office Hours

Monday9:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Tuesday9:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Wednesday9:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Thursday9:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Friday9:00 AM - 5:00 PM

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