Greenville Attorney Urges Seniors and Their Children To Get
Their Estate Planning Affairs Organized
Elder Law is a relatively new specialized discipline of law that focuses on the issues that are faced by the most quickly growing sector of America's
population, seniors. It joins the elements of Estate Planning, Conservatorship, Health Care Planning, Wills and Trusts and Medicare/Medicaid Planning.
Mr.Pete Fields, a Greenville Lawyer, from Greenville, South Carolina, works to warn the elderly and their children of the confusion that will arise if estate planning issues and concerns do not get fixed quickly, "If you wait too long, it may very well be too late to have your affairs dealt with
how you want them taken care of!
The following is just a small listing of what this
Greenville Estate Planning Attorney will help you manage:
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Take Care Of Loved Ones and Family Properly
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Save on Income Taxes, Estate Taxes and Death Taxes
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Make Legitimate Investments
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Lower and Possibly Eliminate Assisted Living Facility Costs
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Make Arrangements for The Care That You'll
Need Prior to that Time Emerging
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Secure Your Life Savings, Increase The Income You Keep
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Pass along An Inheritance To Your Loved Ones
Reasons You Should Work On Estate Planning Right Away!
No one enjoys belabor the thought of their mortality. But if you table making plans for your passing until it is too late, you risk that your planned inheritors -- people who you love -- might not receive the things you would want them to receive no matter if it is because of undesirable taxes or squabbling among your heirs. These are some of the reasons planning your estate is so imperative, and it doesn't matter how large or small your estate may be! It allows you, while you're still alive, to ensure that your property and assets will go to those people that you desire, in the way you desire, and at the time you want. It provides a way for you to save as much as you can on taxes, attorneys' fees and court costs; and it affords the relief that those you love can mourn your death and not be weighed down simultaneously with needless red tape and financial difficulty. Each estate plan must contain, at minimum, two critical estate planning instruments: a durable power of attorney and a will. Power of attorney is for controlling and managing your property while you are alive, in case you are ever unable to do so yourself. A will is for the dispersal and supervision of your assets and property after death. In addition, more and more, Americans are utilizing living (or revocable) trusts in order to stay away from probate and to manage their estate both once they are gone and while they're living. How will you know if you need this service?
-No legal
documents
-Have out of date documents and your children are grown
-Have documents which no longer communicate your wishes
About the author:
Pete Fields is a
Greenville estate planning
lawyer in Greenville, South Carolina.
Mr. Fields also has an office that is in Clemson,SC that includes a
Clemson estate planning attorney. This information is for general informational purposes only and does not
constitute legal advice. If you've got individual questions or concerns, you should speak to a well qualified elder law attorney. 2007 The Fields Law Firm