General Estate Planning issues (Wills, PoA, AHDs)

Good luck with the "plan" to perfectly balance the money to not be in credit at the time of the reaper. ;)
It would be wonderful wouldn’t it :). Blow everything on a series of amazing holidays, come home to the (rented) accommodation and lie down and die. Unfortunately you have to calculate on living into your nineties, so a much harder task.
 
Or, as my sons remind me "Dad remember, we get to pick your nursing home"....
 
Last edited:
@JohnK we are not writing anyone off in this thread.
Because I had heart surgery 25 years ago I have faced up to the idea of not making it to a nursing home.
My original advisors have retired or are edging closer to retirement.
I do hope many are fixing up their wills and POAs and are placing these documents in a safe and known location.
 
Just bumping this thread; was watching ABC 4 corners last night mentioning undertakers and it reminded me of this thread.

Where do you find a good solictor who won't cost to much.

A google search didn't really suggest where to download a do it yourself will.
@Bundy Bear Queenslanders can get free wills.

You can make an appointment at the office of the Public Trustee.

I made my first will there - took about an hour.

I updated last month and it only took 20 mins - the update was also free.
 
Have to say in my old job when we had to deal with public trustees as either executors or guardians it was horrendous .
I would never recommend them , however some people don't have the wherewithal to go somewhere else
 
I would never recommend them , however some people don't have the wherewithal to go somewhere else
Sometimes it's that they don't have anyone else they trust to do it - no close friends or family, or family/beneficiaries are based overseas, etc.

Like many state government departments, too much work + not enough (good) staff = poor client outcomes.
 
It is vitally important because if he dies now he will be considered intestate with all of the resulting confusion and legal problems that causes. A will is declared void upon marriage.

I would not say it’s vitally important. If he’s married then I suspect the will would have everything going to the wife. If he dies without a will and is intestacy then it goes to the wife. It only becomes more important once you need to start leaving trusts for children once born etc or want to leave specific gifts to people.
 
For my own record, I am upto reading page 6 of 12. I also don't yet have a will (lazy, don't know who to choose as will ceo!).

Need to sleep, but will comment again after I finish reading every page.
 
Read our AFF credit card guides and start earning more points now.

AFF Supporters can remove this and all advertisements

If he’s married then I suspect the will would have everything going to the wife. If he dies without a will and is intestacy then it goes to the wife.

And what if he has a prior wife/de facto? A will should address past relationships and how you want your assets divided. Adult children from a previous relationship? If he dies intestate part of the estate will go to them in a percentage basis that may not reflect his wishes. And so on.

A will eliminates these potential claims and will provide the necessary guidance as to how to proceed without confusion. Also his wife should get a new will made as well.
 
And what if he has a prior wife/de facto? A will should address past relationships and how you want your assets divided. Adult children from a previous relationship? If he dies intestate part of the estate will go to them in a percentage basis that may not reflect his wishes. And so on.

A will eliminates these potential claims and will provide the necessary guidance as to how to proceed without confusion. Also his wife should get a new will made as well.
Sure but that’s an individual issue and not one if it’s first marriage and no children as yet. Simples.
 
And what if he has a prior wife/de facto? A will should address past relationships and how you want your assets divided. Adult children from a previous relationship? If he dies intestate part of the estate will go to them in a percentage basis that may not reflect his wishes. And so on.

A will eliminates these potential claims and will provide the necessary guidance as to how to proceed without confusion. Also his wife should get a new will made as well.

Wills do not need to address prior relationships. And the laws of intestacy are clear re the spouse/ partner you were with immediately prior to death. The legislation does not include ex’s in the order of priority.

If you have a simple estate then it’s a nice to have really but not critical. Complex assets, kids, gifts etc then yeah...different story.
 
(Grrr I pressed something and have to try and write everything again!)

I'm confused on what option I should decide regarding wills / legal powers.

Option 1: No will (eww state trust..)
Option 2: Basic will (Lawyer)
Option 3**: 3 generation will / bundle (will include screen shots with inclusions).

- We are defacto, with PPOR in joint names, investment not with my name included.

- No kids of our own, but registered foster carers**

- I'm the yougest in my direct family (in my 40's), with cousins and also 2 nieces / 2 nephews.

- I could have combined assets of $2+, which would be house, super, shares, insurance (excluding household junk/car).

- I would have no clue on asking any friends, family, strangers to be involved once I'm dead. How do I trust anyone, what occures if they became unable to continue or start (death, accident, injury, not interested)?

Basic golden rule should be to pay all debts of in full before anyone else get anything of value (ie: sell car, super, insurance).

Not really interested in allowing charities to be written into anything, as most donations cover management/wages, not the actual causes.

Not really fussed about online access passwords / emails, as once I'm dead, it will never be used by me again. Bank accounts should be as simple as a death certificate or police report!

Screen shots below detail everything included, including future familys (ie: grandkids) and if things go messy (divorce, kids relationship breakdown with partner to name a few.

I'm honestly way too confused about all the cough that can happen when someone dies! (why spend millions in court, then recieve $0.52c after all costs and years involved?)
 

Attachments

  • Screenshot_20190928-154858_Chrome.jpg
    Screenshot_20190928-154858_Chrome.jpg
    62.9 KB · Views: 14
  • Screenshot_20190928-154858_Chrome.jpg
    Screenshot_20190928-154858_Chrome.jpg
    62.9 KB · Views: 14
  • Screenshot_20190928-154931_Chrome.jpg
    Screenshot_20190928-154931_Chrome.jpg
    71 KB · Views: 12
  • Screenshot_20190928-155022_Chrome.jpg
    Screenshot_20190928-155022_Chrome.jpg
    81.1 KB · Views: 9
I was recently involved in a friend's estate when she died suddenly and we didn't have any of her passwords and couldn't even get into her phone. It was a nightmare to try and close accounts etc. It would have been so much easier if she had left a list or even the password to a password manager with her solicitor
 
We mainly went to a testamentary trust because we felt the 3 children had uneven outcomes as far as future earning ability went. Dr FM and Master FM are already earning way more than Ms FM and this is likely to accelerate in the future. Of course things could change with Ill health etc. a testamentary trust enabled them to direct the income to whoever needed it most, or to share it equally if there wasn’t any need. There are downsides to a joint trust - they need to work together which they seem to think they can. A joint trust also protects the assets a little more in a divorce situation, than 3 single trusts. The trust ends when the 3 children die and the remaining assets are split equally across any grandchildren.

The other thing we wanted to do was protect assets if one person died before the other (which of course is likely). So for e.g. if Mr FM dies, half the estate goes into the testamentary trust. Then if I go batty and want to give all my money to Nigerian scammers, or to a friend, at least half the estate is protected. We each have equal assets currently, so that made it easier.
 

Become an AFF member!

Join Australian Frequent Flyer (AFF) for free and unlock insider tips, exclusive deals, and global meetups with 65,000+ frequent flyers.

AFF members can also access our Frequent Flyer Training courses, and upgrade to Fast-track your way to expert traveller status and unlock even more exclusive discounts!

AFF forum abbreviations

Wondering about Y, J or any of the other abbreviations used on our forum?

Check out our guide to common AFF acronyms & abbreviations.
Back
Top