Downs Law Firm Laurel, MD

Quarantine At Home

Quaratine
It has been said that your home is your castle and home is where the heart is. We are living that now more than ever, and adjusting to getting things done at home. We are able to help with your estate planning while you do so.

Quarantine

Forty days… Jesus went into the desert for forty days. It rained on Noah forty days and forty nights. These are significant times of adjustment and reflection. As we enter this time realm of the unreal, with the entire world out of sorts for our own safety, I hope you are weathering the passage well.

Quarantine means forty. It dates back to the black plague, where ships for foreign places were to stay unloaded, with crews remaining onboard, for forty days. It turns out that the plague lasted about 37 days, so the forty days was about right. That might have been an interesting historical footnote a year ago, but seems quite relevant today.

I know there are many people who have suffered terrible losses during this crisis, with the death of loved ones, and many shattered expectations. I hope you have found the opportunity for growth through your journey.

We are working now, with video conferencing and making home visits to sign, witness and notarized documents, usually in the garage or front yard. We can help put planning in place or update it while you are home.

In this time of the coronavirus, and the challenges most of us now face living, working and staying largely within the walls of our homes, consider some ways to manage a home within your estate plan.

Great Planning Begins at Home (and We’re There A Lot Now)

It has been said that your home is your castle and home is where the heart is. Without a doubt, the place we call “home” is a very special place. This is especially true if your family is grown and gone. Can you hear laughter in the walls from birthdays, holiday celebrations, or graduation gatherings? Intermingled with the joy, there may be some sorrow in those walls, too.

Yes, home is a very special place.

In addition to the memories that reside inside, your home likely holds a significant amount of your personal wealth. Consequently, you need to make sure your home is protected while you live there. When you are ready to leave your home, there are some important things to know about selling your home or even transferring it to your loved ones.

Here we will survey some fundamentals to help you avoid some common legal and tax mistakes when it comes to your home, along with some thoughts on transferring it successfully.

Insurance and State Law Protections

The purpose of homeowners’ insurance is obvious – you pay an insurance premium you can afford now to cover a loss you cannot afford later. Whether it is a fire, flood, twister, or other disasters, such insurance only makes sense. In fact, mortgage companies require homeowners to maintain homeowners insurance as a condition of the mortgage. In addition to at least a basic homeowners policy, ask your insurance agent about an “umbrella” policy to provide additional coverage above your policy limits. This added protection is relatively inexpensive, but it can protect your home and other assets in the event you were sued. All it takes is one “slip and fall” by an invited (or uninvited) guest on your property for the policy to pay for itself many times over.

All states afford some degree of legal protection for your home itself should you be sued or file for bankruptcy. Some states protect a certain dollar value, others may protect the homestead to varying degrees depending on how long you have lived in your home, and still others may provide full protection to married couples when they jointly own the home as tenants by the entirety. In the end, state law will control when it comes to the degree of protection afforded your home ownership. An experienced estate planning attorney can explain the protection unique to the laws of your state.

Joint Ownership Dangers

Most married couples own their home together and that is reflected right on the deed to their home. If owned as “joint tenants with rights of survivorship” or as “tenants by the entirety” and not as “tenants in common,” then no “probate” is required for the “surviving spouse” to “inherit” full ownership of the home.

When that happens, do not make the common “mistake” of adding the name of an adult child or other family member as a new “joint tenant” of your home to avoid future probate at your passing. This single mistake can have many serious tax and non-tax consequences, to include:

  • Triggering current “gift taxes,” while losing the full stepped-up basis at death;
  • Subjecting your home to the liabilities of your joint tenant (e.g., divorces, lawsuits, or bankruptcies); and
  • Penalizing you for Medicaid eligibility purposes.

Gift versus Inheritance

When you gift your home, whether by adding one or more loved ones as joint tenants or by transferring full ownership to them by deed, you are also making a future gift to the IRS in the form of additional capital gains taxes when the home is sold. That is because you are giving your loved ones your basis in the home along with the home. On the other hand, if they “inherit” the home from you, then the basis they inherit is the fair market value of the home as of your date of death. This one move can make a big tax difference.

Wills, Deeds and Living Trusts

There are a variety of ways to transfer your home at death. One method is to do nothing and let the probate court distribute your home according to state law. This method may not reflect your wishes and can be rather expensive and time-consuming. Your Last Will and Testament can enable you to control who inherits your home and authorize the most streamlined probate process permitted in your state. This can save considerable expenses and delays.

If you want to bypass probate, then consult with a qualified estate planning attorney to determine whether your state provides for non-probate real estate transfers. About 30 states provide for “beneficiary deeds” to transfer your home without probate upon your death. These deeds are revocable and amendable by you during your lifetime, too.

Revocable living trusts are a popular method to avoid probate on your home and all of your other assets. Basically, you create the trust, name yourself as trustee, and are the beneficiary throughout your lifetime. If you become incapacitated, then a successor you appoint takes over … but you remain the beneficiary. At your death, the trustee then administers and distributes the trust assets according to your instructions.

All wills and deeds are a matter of public record. If “privacy” is important to you, then you may want to consider using a revocable living trust to transfer your home and other assets.

Upcoming Basis Estate Planning Webinars

On April 28th at Noon and April 29th at 6:00 P.M. we are hosting webinars on the basics of Estate Planning, where we will explain joint ownership, beneficiaries, wills, and trusts. Please join us for a refresher or to learn about these tools, and invite a friend or family member who could use some inspiration getting a plan in place.

To sign up, go to our website and register under our Events tab.

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Building wealth is only half the job. Protecting wealth for your loved ones and yourself is equally important. Through estate planning, business planning, and asset protection, our firm will help you protect everything you love — family, friends and favorite charities. For more information be sure to visit our web site where you will have access to our blog, events schedule, and a complimentary newsletter subscription!

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