This questionnaire is designed to address different scenarios (and includes hypothetical examples), which may or may not apply to you. Therefore, please skip those questions or ignore those examples that don’t apply to you.
1. Who should be the primary beneficiaries of your Will when you die?
⊛ For example, 100% of your assets/money to your spouse? Remaining balance to your children?
⊛ Or, only some of your assets/money to your spouse, and the balance to others?
⊛ Or, 100% (or less) to a friend or to a charity?
2. Who should get your assets/money in the event that none of your designated beneficiaries survive you (assume for a moment that “the plane goes down with all on board”)?
Other relatives? Friends? A charity?
3. Do you want to make specific bequests? In other words, do you want to leave certain specific assets/items to certain individuals?
⊛ For example: your ring to this beneficiary, your watch to that beneficiary, etc.
4. Who will be the primary executor(s) of your Will?
⊛ The executor is in charge of probating your Will (submitting it to court for approval), paying your taxes/expenses (if any) and distributing your assets to the various beneficiaries.
⊛ Who should be the back-up(s) to your primary executor (a/k/a successor executor)?
⊛ Note: you can appoint co-executors (in case you want 2+ persons to act together).
5. Revocable Family Trust
⊛ Do you wish to have a Revocable Family Trust, for purposes of (among other things) (i) providing significant added flexibility to your executor to take advantage of estate tax exemptions available at your death, (ii) helping avoiding/minimizing probate, (iii) planning for your incapacity and/or (iv) imposing conditions (a/k/a “strings”) on the distribution of your assets after your death?
⊛ Typically, initially you would be the sole trustee & sole beneficiary of your Revocable Family Trust, while you are alive.
⊛ Who should be the beneficiaries of your Revocable Family Trust after your death? • For example, 100% of your assets for the benefit of your spouse during his/her life?
⊛ Who should be the successor trustee of your Revocable Family Trust (upon your incapacity or death)?
⊛ Do you want to place age restrictions on the distributions from the Revocable Family Trust? Meaning, do you want your beneficiaries (for example, your children) to wait until they attained a certain age (a/k/a “until they are mature enough”) before they are entitled to the trust assets?
⊛ Alternatively, would you like the assets to remain in trust for as long as your beneficiaries live (aka “Lifetime Trust”)?
⊛ Who should be the trustee(s) of your children’s trusts?
⊛ Would you like to place additional restrictions or conditions on your assets or on the beneficiaries, which must be met before your beneficiaries would be entitled to distributions?
6. Business/Partnership Interests
⊛ What should happen with your business after your death?
⊛ What should happen with your business/partnership interests (such as LLCs, partnerships, corporations) after your death?
7. Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust (if you have, or wish to purchase, a life insurance policy and you want to remove the life insurance proceeds from the estate tax and/or you want the life insurance proceeds to be distributed only based on certain conditions)
⊛ Who should be the beneficiaries of your irrevocable life insurance trust (that is, of the proceeds of your life insurance policies)?
⊛ Who should be the trustee of your irrevocable life insurance trust?
8. Do you wish to remove -during your lifetime- assets from your taxable (or expected to be taxable) estate?
⊛ For example, do you wish to transfer (a/k/a gift) certain assets to an irrevocable trust, such as for the benefit of your children, during your lifetime?
9. Do you wish to remove -during your lifetime- assets from your taxable (or expected to be taxable) estate?
⊛ For example, do you wish to transfer (a/k/a gift) certain assets to an irrevocable trust, such as for the benefit of your children, during your lifetime?
10. Who should be the agent(s) of your Power of Attorney?
⊛ During your incapacity, your agent would oversee your banking, finances, and many if not all other “administrative matters,” etc. Essentially, your agent would oversee all decisions (other than healthcare decisions) concerning you that you would make if you had capacity.
⊛ For example, your spouse as the primary agent?
⊛ Or, your spouse together with another person?
⊛ Note: you can appoint primary “co-agents” (in case you want 2+ persons to act together).
⊛ Who should be the successor agents (a/k/a back-up)?
⊛ Note: you can appoint co-agents (in case you want 2+ persons to act together).
⊛ Please provide addresses, phone numbers and email addresses of all agents.
11. Who should be the agent(s) of your Health Care Proxy?
⊛ Your agent would be in charge of making medical decisions if you are incapacitated.
⊛ Who should be the successor agents (a/k/a back-up)?
⊛ Note: Unlike for the POA, you can have only one agent acting at a time (meaning, no joint-agents).
⊛ Please provide addresses, phone numbers and email addresses of all agents.
12. What are your wishes concerning “end-of-life” situations, to be expressed in your Living Will?
⊛ You can leave those decisions up to your agent of your health care proxy (though I recommend that you make your wishes known).
13. Who should be the guardian of your minor children, if G’d forbid both of you die while you have minor children?
⊛ This person should have (i) “values” similar to yours, and (ii) the financial and mental wherewithal to take care of your children.
14. Should your and your spouse’s estate documents be ‘mirror images’ of each other, or will your estate documents have different provisions?
⊛ For example, will both of you name the same individuals as your executors, trustees, agents of your POA and/or beneficiaries?