This article defines Estate Planning as the process of arranging for the management and distribution of an individual’s assets after deaths or incapacitation. Core documents: (1) will (legal instructions for asset distribution and guardianship of minor children), (2) trust (legal entity holding assets for beneficiaries, bypassing probate), (3) power of attorney (POA) (authorises another to act on your behalf for financial or health matters), (4) advance healthcare directive (living will, specifying medical preferences). The article addresses: objectives of estate planning; key concepts including probate, intestacy, executor, and trustee; core mechanisms such as will executions formalities, trust funding, and durable vs springing POA; international comparisons and debated issues (estate tax thresholds, trust jurisdictions, digital assets); summary and emerging trends (online will services, digital asset planning, beneficiary designations); and a Q&A section.
This article describes estate planning without providing legal advice. Objectives commonly cited: avoiding intestacy (state-determined distribution), minimising probate costs and delays, reducing estate taxes, providing for minor children or dependents, and ensuring healthcare wishes respected.
Key terminology:
Estate tax exemptions (US, 2025):
Will requirements (most US states):
Trust types:
Power of attorney types:
Beneficiary designations (avoid probate entirely):
Inheritance/estate taxes (selected countries):
| Country | Estate/inheritance tax | Exemption | Rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| United States | Federal estate tax | $13.99 million (2025) | 18-40% |
| United Kingdom | Inheritance tax (IHT) | £325,000 | 40% |
| Canada | No estate tax | N/A | N/A (deemed disposition at deaths) |
| Australia | No inheritance tax | N/A | N/A |
| Germany | Inheritance tax | €400,000 (child) | 7-30% |
Debated issues:
Summary: Estate planning documents include will (for probate), living trust (avoid probate), POA (financial/healthcare), and beneficiary designations (pass outside probate). Federal estate tax applies only to estates over $13.99 million (2025). Intestacy should be avoided.
Emerging trends:
Q1: Do I need a trust if my estate is below the probate threshold?
A: Many states have small estate procedures (e.g., $50,000-150,000) allowing simplified probate. Trusts are still useful for incapacity planning, privacy, and control over distributions.
Q2: What happens if I die without a will (intestate)?
A: State law determines distribution: spouse typically gets 1/2 to all; children split remainder; parents or siblings if no spouse/children. Unmarried partners receive nothing.
Q3: Can I write my own will without a lawyer?
A: Yes (holographic will in some states, statutory will forms). Risks: improper executions, ambiguous language, missing provisions, self-contradiction. Recommended for simple estates only.
https://www.irs.gov/estate-tax
https://www.uniformlaws.org/ (RUFADAA)
https://www.americanbar.org/groups/real_property_trust_estate