Looking towards your retirement, you need to think carefully about not just the expenses you might need to pay, but how taxes can impact that landscape. Taxes could reduce the size of your estate that you intend to leave behind for heirs, but they could also influence your overall financial picture. Investment earnings can be hit hard in your older years when it comes to taxes. An important goal of proper investing Read More
Two Ways to Protect Your Estate from Taxes
Tax planning is an important component of completing your estate plan and it should always be done under the guidance of an experienced professional. This is because there are many different details to consider in minimizing or avoiding taxes and you want to ensure that you have thought through all of the possibilities. One of the easiest ways to minimize your tax burden is to put your assets inside a trust. A trust Read More
Do You Know Where Your Digital Assets Will Go?
You are creating a digital footprint every time you post something on social media, share a photo gallery with your loved ones, look at your health records electronically or send an email. But what happens to all of the assets or accounts associated with these actions after you pass away? Have you created a plan for how these will be deleted, preserved, or made inactive once you pass away? If not, you need a plan Read More
Can Anyone Serve as the Executor of a New Hampshire Estate?
One of the most important reasons to create a will, regardless of your age or perception of your personal wealth, is to name an executor. This is because this important role is a person who will carry out the administration of your estate after you pass away. Their primary job is to protect any of the property that you owned until any taxes and debts have been paid and then transfer any remaining property to your Read More
What Are the Limitations with Living Trusts?
Living trusts are some of the most popular types of trusts used by a grantor or the person who creates them to accomplish estate planning goals. There are many different advantages associated with living trusts including privacy during situations in which the state demands an inventory of asset filing, easy succession of trustees, the elimination of delays associated with probate, end of life provisions as desired by Read More
How to Designate a Guardian in Your Will
A child is considered a minor until he or she reaches age 18, at which point they are considered an adult and are capable of making legal decisions on their own. In the event that you have a minor child under the age of 18, naming a guardian in your will is one way to ensure that your child is cared for by a person that you trust and someone who is capable of serving in this role in the event that something happens Read More
Reasons to Name a Guardian for Your Minor Children
In general, there are two parents who are able and willing to serve and care for their children and if one passes away, the other one by default take over physical custody in addition to responsibility for caring for the child. A minor guardian should be appointed in your estate planning documents to step into such an important role. In many states across the US, the surviving parent can also be given the authority Read More
Three Key People You’ll Need as Part of Your Estate Plan
The parties that you select to serve in important roles in your estate plan can make a big impact on making things easier for you or your loved ones in the event that the cornerstone estate planning documents need to be activated. Three of the most important people you can select to serve as part of your estate plan include your durable power of attorney agent, your health care power of attorney agent and a Read More
Three Key People You’ll Need as Part of Your Estate Plan
The parties that you select to serve in important roles in your estate plan can make a big impact on making things easier for you or your loved ones in the event that the cornerstone estate planning documents need to be activated. Three of the most important people you can select to serve as part of your estate plan include your durable power of attorney agent, your health care power of attorney agent and a Read More
What to Consider If You Are a Snowbird?
If you’re one of the people who spend the warm part of the year in New Hampshire or Maine but seek Florida during the winter, be sure you know how this could include some of your existing estate planning or elder law documents. If you spend the good part of the winter in Florida, it's important to think about how this could potentially impact your estate planning. Snowbirds often split their time between two places Read More








