Avoid legal wrangles and confusion over who will benefit from your estate
A valid Will is an incredibly important part of estate preservation planning and will ensure that, should the worst happen, your assets, whether they be financial wealth or possessions, are distributed in an orderly fashion to the right beneficiaries.
It’s important to make sure that after your death, your assets and possessions go to the people and organisations you choose, such as family members and charities you want to support.
A Will is a very powerful document which will hopefully avoid legal wrangles and confusion over who will benefit from your estate. You can also leave a gift to charities of your choosing.
Wills and Inheritance Tax planning more broadly are sensitive subjects for households across the UK and are often thought of as slightly taboo topics.
Types of Lasting Power of Attorney
A Lasting Power of Attorney (LPA) is a way of giving someone you trust, your Attorney, the legal authority to make decisions on your behalf if you lose the mental capacity to do so in the future, or if you no longer want to make decisions for yourself.
Health and Welfare LPAs
A Health and Welfare LPA allows you to appoint an Attorney to make decisions about matters such as:
• Your medical care
• Where you live
• Your daily routine, such as what you eat and what you wear
• Whom you have contact with
• Whether you have life-sustaining treatment – although only if you have given express permission
Property and Financial Affairs LPAs
A Property and Financial Affairs LPA gives your Attorney the power to do things such as:
• Buy and sell your property
• Pay your bills
• Collect your pension or benefits
• Manage your bank accounts
Emotional and financial pressure
A Will can provide peace of mind that not only will the correct beneficiaries benefit from any estate distribution, but also that it is done as efficiently as possible. But only 13% of UK adults have written a living Will, which is used to provide advanced decisions on refusing medical treatments if you become terminally ill or lose the ability to make decisions around medical treatment yourself. A further 6% said they had made a living Will, now more commonly called an ‘advance decision.’
While no one likes to think about their own mortality, getting your house in order by having the right legal instructions can take away much of the emotional and financial pressure at a very difficult time. Taking the first step is always the most difficult but puts you as the benefactor in the driving seat.
Especially important if you have children
A Will can help reduce the amount of Inheritance Tax that might be payable on the value of the property and money you leave behind. Writing a Will is especially important if you have children or other family who depend on you financially, or if you want to leave something to people outside your immediate family.
If you die without a valid Will, you will be dying intestate and your estate will pass to those entitled under the intestacy rules. Under the intestacy rules, your estate could pass to unintended beneficiaries and leave your loved ones in a very difficult situation at an already emotionally challenging time.