Karl
Klinger, CFP®,
CLU®After a marriage breaks up, about the last thing most people want to do
is sit down with one more attorney. But no matter how old you are or whether
you have kids, it's important to consult both financial and legal experts to
make sure you have an updated estate and financial plan for your new life
once the divorce decree is final.
It's also best to blend estate planning with financial planning
post-divorce. If you weren't working with a Certified
Financial
Planner™
professional or estate planner during the divorce process, it's time to do
so now. The immediate months after a divorce can be disorienting -- even if
you don't move, you are literally starting a new household that you will
have to direct yourself, and that means new money issues to face.
This is why that the weeks immediately after a divorce are a good time to
revisit short- and long-term spending and planning goals. Here's a general
road map to that process:
Start with a Certified
Financial
Planner™
professional:
Whether you plan to stay single, remarry or move in with a new partner, it's
good to get a baseline look at your finances as early as possible after the
divorce is final. Expenses for the newly single can pile up quickly and
unexpectedly, and a Certified
Financial
Planner™
professional can help you review your new current spending and savings
needs, compare strategies to achieve long-term goals like college and
retirement and give you critical tools to protect your assets and loved ones
if you die suddenly. Even if you have a good relationship with an ex-spouse
and you addressed key issues for your children as part of the divorce
proceedings, you need to revisit all these issues as a single individual
before you move on to the next stage.
Talk with a trained estate planning attorney about wills and other
critical documents: True, there are software programs and other kit
solutions available to write basic wills, powers of attorney and certain
simple trust agreements. But it makes sense to coordinate the activities of
a financial planner with an estate planning attorney who can tailor an
overall estate plan specific to your needs no matter how basic they might be
right now. Even if you are very young with few assets, it makes sense to get
some solid advice in this area so you'll be able to manage such planning as
you age and your finances get more complex. Particularly if you have kids,
such planning is important if you plan to remarry and if you want to
guarantee that specific assets are guaranteed for them when you die. In some
cases where a spouse dies unmarried with minor children, an ex-spouse might
automatically gain control of assets that were supposed to be earmarked for
the kids. If you don't want that to happen, you need to plan for that
legally.
Make a guardianship game plan for your kids: It's not enough to plan
how money and assets will go to your children if you or your ex-spouse die
suddenly or are incapacitated. If your children are minors, it's
particularly important to make sure you and your ex-spouse have a
guardianship plan for their upbringing as well as any assets they may
inherit. You might completely trust your ex-spouse's new husband, wife or
partner to raise your kids if your ex-spouse dies before you, but there may
be others better-equipped to do so -- spell that out now. Also, if there are
any trust or wealth issues that will become effective for your children once
they reach adulthood, it's also important to establish an efficient legal
structure for distributing those assets as well as appointing a trustee in a
will to train and guide your kids through that financial transition.
Plan for special needs kids: If one of your children is disabled and
is expected to need lifetime assistance of some type, then you should
consult a qualified attorney to help you create a special needs trust. It
will help protect your child from having to give up any public or social
financial assistance as well as access to special doctors, medical help,
special prescriptions or treatments that could be taken away if they were to
personally inherit assets that would disqualify them for these programs.
When such assets are held in trust, they are not counted as the child's
assets. The advantage is that those inherited assets may still be used to
support their housing or other personal living needs.
Get solid protection in place: Most people focus on what may happen
to their health insurance if they get divorced, but insurance issues like
life, property/casualty and disability insurance are sometimes put on the
back burner. If you're newly single, you definitely need the best health
coverage you can afford for yourself and your kids, but life, property,
liability and disability insurance becomes doubly important, particularly if
you failed to address those needs during the divorce. Even if your ex-spouse
is cooperative with financial support, it's wise to insure yourself as if
they weren't. A
Certified
Financial
Planner™
professional should be able to go through those options in detail.
Review all your investments for primary ownership and beneficiary
information: Even if you were advised correctly to change the names on
assets you and your spouse were dividing between yourselves, it still makes
sense post-divorce to review that the names are indeed correct on those
assets, and most important, to make sure all beneficiary information is
correct.
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This article was
produced by The Financial Planning Association.
200810 2008-4451 |