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      • Special Needs Trusts
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What Should Be Included in Your Estate Plan?

Serving Clients in the Gilbert, Arizona Area

What Should Be Included in Your Estate Plan?
  • August 18, 2025
  • Advanced Directives, Estate Planning, Power of Attorney, Wills & Trusts
Gilbert Arizona estate planning attorney

BY: Jake Carlson

Jake Carlson is an estate planning attorney, recognized business leader, inspiring presenter, and popular podcast host. He is personable and connects immediately with others. A natural storyteller, he loves listening to your story and exploring what matters most to you.

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In addition to the health care directive, other items that are part of estate planning include designating a financial power of attorney and establishing a will or trust.
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Estate planning attorneys often have clients who are more than 100 years old. However, those clients have usually made all their estate planning decisions while they were far younger, like in their 70s or 80s! A recent article, “Guidelines for estate planning, from a Golden Valley attorney,” from Sun Post, explains what your estate plan should include and why.

People should have their estate plans in place long before they turn 100, to provide peace of mind for themselves and for their heirs and executors, who will need to take over their affairs in case of incapacity or when they ultimately die.

Everyone should have a healthcare directive, sometimes called a Power of Attorney for Healthcare or Healthcare Proxy. This allows another person to have access to medical information and acts to express your wishes if you can’t communicate your wishes because of illness or an injury.

One person should be appointed to follow your healthcare and end-of-life instructions. Making your wishes clear in a legally binding document ensures that your loved ones know what you want and will help them make decisions for your care during a healthcare crisis.

You’ll also want a financial power of attorney in place so someone else can manage your financial life. Some people opt to make their bank accounts payable to a trust or retitle the bank as a “Transfer on Death” (TOD) account. This lets someone gain access to your finances. Let’s say you needed to be hospitalized for an extended period—having these documents in place will allow bills to be paid, your home maintained and avoid penalties for late or non-payment.

Many people today have trusts to prevent the estate from going through probate. When a will goes through probate, it becomes part of the public record. Probate takes time and can be costly. While probate in some jurisdictions isn’t as bad as in others, it can delay settling your estate by months or years.

Everyone who is over 18 needs to have a will. A will describes how your assets are to be distributed. If you have family heirlooms, for instance, your will can clarify who you want to receive a necklace or piece of art. The will instructs your executor, so they know exactly what you want to happen.

Your will is also used to nominate a guardian for minor children. Parents should always have a will, so they can name the person they want to raise their children in case both parents die.

Not having an estate plan leads to all kinds of problems for families. For one thing, the distribution of assets, and who should be the guardian for children and executor of your estate, are all decided according to the state’s laws. You may not have wanted your first cousin to raise your children. However, the court will make the decision for you. It’s better to have a will.

If you already have a will but haven’t updated it in more than three years, it’s time to dust it off and have it reviewed by an experienced estate planning attorney. Changes in your life and tax laws could mean that your will isn’t going to work the way it once did.

A final note: ask your estate planning attorney about how to store your estate planning documents. If your documents are stored at a safe deposit box, they will be sealed upon death and won’t be accessed until a court order has been obtained. This can delay settling the estate and create complications for loved ones.

To learn more about estate planning in the East Valley, Gilbert, Mesa and Queen Creek, schedule your free consultation with Attorney Jake Carlson by using one of the links above.

Reference: Sun Post (March 20, 2025) “Guidelines for estate planning, from a Golden Valley attorney”

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