The Samuel Roberts Noble Foundation, Inc.   Act Now to Preserve Your Estate
  Act Now to Preserve Your Estate - Press Release, 2003

Media advisory issued February 3, 2003, effective immediately.
For media inquiries, contact Caroline Booth Lara, Communications Specialist, (580) 224-6379.
  email: cblara@noble.org.

Act Now to Preserve Your Estate

ARDMORE, Okla. — Is the estate you spent a lifetime accumulating and conserving going to be reduced significantly by the time your heirs receive it?

"Only action now on your part will help to ensure your heirs receive the estate you intend, " said Steve Swigert, agricultural economist at the Noble Foundation. "Ill-advised or misguided action, or complete inaction, may allow taxes and probate to take a large portion of your estate and allow someone else to determine how your estate is distributed. "

Estate is the wealth a person accumulates during their lifetime, including real estate, livestock, machinery, stocks, bonds, cash, and retirement plans among other things.

"To conserve an estate, you must achieve two goals: manage your estate during your lifetime and arrange for distribution upon your death, " Swigert said. "By taking the necessary steps in estate conservation, you can avoid conflicts among your heirs, reduce delays and expenses by dealing with these issues now, and you can make the decisions about what you want to do with your estate. "

There are several decisions to make when deciding how to conserve your estate, according to Swigert.

Choose the right attorney. Work with one you feel comfortable with, who takes your issues seriously, and who deals with estate planning on a daily basis.

  • Select the people to receive your assets.
  • Decide how and when your heirs will receive inheritance.
  • Select who will manage your estate (i.e., executor, trustee, etc.).
  • Take action now to minimize your estate settlement costs. Avoid probate — Most generally, the courts will handle your estate if you do nothing. The probate process is time consuming, costly and very public. Often, probate can cost from 5 percent to 8 percent of your gross estate and can take from six months to a year or more and your heirs will have to wait for the bulk of the estate until after probate.
  • Reduce the tax burden — Federal tax rates can go as high as 55 percent on taxable estates. There are a couple of exceptions to estate taxes.
    — Unlimited exemption on transfer of assets between spouses.
    — Unified Gift and Estate Tax Credit — Amount of assets that may be excluded from estate taxes.

Swigert adds that this additional information is needed for planning:

  • An estimate of your estate tax liability.
  • Can or do you want to make annual gift transfers? An annual gift tax exclusion allows you to transfer up to $10,000 per person to any number of individuals free from federal estate and gift taxes.

"The decision of how to distribute your estate is very important. But generally, there are three basic ways this distribution will take place, " he said.

  • Electing to do nothing — the most common way of estate transfer. Again, the problem with this approach is that it is costly and someone else will make the decision for your estate.
  • Distribution of your estate through the use of a will — A properly drafted will controls the distribution of your estate, minimizes fees and taxes and ensures probate.
  • Establish a trust — The use of a trust can control the distribution of your estate, minimize fees and taxes, and many trusts can completely avoid probate.

This information is a brief outline of the basic concepts of estate planning. To deal with these issues in detail, it takes a person trained in estate planning to work through the difficult issues.

"Make sure it is someone who is willing to work with you and your family to reach the appropriate plan, " Swigert said.

Dealing with estate issues can often be an emotional roller coaster for families.

"Many families have broken up over these issues, so it is imperative that lines of communication be established so that the process will allow for the appropriate distribution of the estate, and the estate transfer process does not come to a halt because no one is willing to deal with the difficult issues, " Swigert said.

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The Samuel Roberts Noble Foundation, headquartered in Ardmore, Okla., is a non-profit organization conducting agricultural, forage biotechnological, and plant biology research; providing grants to numerous non-profit charitable, educational and health organizations; and assisting farmers and ranchers through educational and consultative agricultural programs.

To learn more, visit the Noble Foundation Web site at http://www.noble.org.

More news releases available at www.noble.org/Press_Release

© 1997-2008 by The Samuel Roberts Noble Foundation, Inc.