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PLANNING FOR TOMORROW:

Understanding How Your Assets will Pass to Your Loved Ones

Estate planning extends far beyond writing a Will. Your assets will pass to heirs through four main pathways and understanding these can help you make better decisions for your family’ s future.
The Four Pathways Your Assets Can Take
Joint Ownership
When you own property jointly with someone else— your home, bank account, or investment— that asset typically passes directly to the surviving owner when you die. This happens automatically, regardless of what your Will says. It’ s simple and immediate, but not always the best choice for every situation.
Beneficiary Designations
Retirement accounts, life insurance policies, and many bank accounts allow you to name beneficiaries. When you pass away, these assets go directly to designated people, bypassing your Will entirely. Many don’ t realize how powerful these designations are— they override whatever instructions you have in your Will.
Will Your Will controls assets that don’ t have joint ownership or beneficiary designations. This might include personal property, individually owned real estate, or accounts without named beneficiaries. These assets go through probate, where a court oversees distribution according to your Will’ s instructions.
Trust
Assets placed in a trust are managed according to the trust’ s terms. Depending on structure, assets can pass to beneficiaries without probate while maintaining important controls and protection.
Who’ s Really in Charge?
When you pass away, your Personal Representative( executor) has ultimate decision-making authority. This person, named in your Will, has legal authority to handle your affairs, pay debts, and ensure your wishes are carried out. Even if most assets pass through joint ownership or beneficiary designations, your Personal Representative handles crucial tasks— from filing final tax returns to dealing with unexpected issues.
The Will: Your Safety Net and Command Center
Think of your Will as both a safety net and command center. It catches assets without other arrangements and serves as the document where you name your Personal Representative and address important family matters like guardianship for minor children. Your Will also provides instructions for unanticipated situations and backup plans that other methods can’ t offer.
A Critical Warning About Avoiding Probate
While avoiding probate has become popular, it shouldn’ t be your primary focus if family members have special needs, addiction issues, financial troubles, or other challenges. When assets pass through beneficiary designations or joint ownership, recipients get money immediately and completely— no matter what.
If your adult child struggles with addiction and you’ ve named them as beneficiary on your retirement account, they’ ll receive that money directly when you pass away. There’ s no court oversight, no gradual distribution, and no protection from creditors or poor decisions. Trusts can provide probate-avoidance benefits while maintaining important protections like assets being distributed over time, held for specific purposes like education or healthcare, and managed by someone you trust.
Beyond the Paperwork
Estate planning isn’ t really about the documents— it’ s about the planning. A good estate plan considers your family dynamics, potential challenges, tax implications, and long-term goals. It coordinates all four methods of asset transfer to work together effectively and includes contingency planning for unexpected situations.
The Bottom Line
Estate planning isn’ t just about death— it’ s about taking care of people you love and ensuring your hard-earned assets serve your family’ s best interests. Remember, it’ s the attorney guiding your planning— not just the papers they prepare— that makes the difference between a good estate plan and one that leaves your family with problems during an already difficult time.
When you’ re ready to discuss your estate planning needs, contact one of our experienced estate planning and elder law attorneys at Zacharia Brown & Bratkovich at 724.942.6200.
Carl Zacharia is the founding partner of the estate planning and elder law firm of Zacharia Brown & Bratkovich P. C. Zacharia Brown & Bratkovich focuses its practice on asset preservation planning; Medicaid eligibility; Veterans Benefits planning; estate administration; and estate planning including wills, powers of attorney, living wills, and trusts. Pittsburgh-area office locations include McMurray, Murrysville and Cranberry. Phone: 724.942.6200 Website: zacbrownlaw. com Email: czacharia @ zacbrownlaw. com
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