Parents of minors need an estate plan

Parents of minors need an estate plan

Why Parents of Minor Children Need an Estate Plan 

Parents of minor children need to plan for the possibility they die before their children reach adulthood. Minors do not have the legal status or cognitive ability to make decisions about their care and finances so an adult must act for them. Two important concerns are who will care for and be the guardian of the children and who will manage the children’s assets.  In most cases, the same person(s) can fill the role of guardian and money manager. By planning ahead parents can have input on the choice of a surrogate decision-maker and how much control and oversight the surrogate has.

Parents may nominate a guardian for their children in their wills. Without prior planning, a court must appoint a conservator to manage assets for a minor. Since a conservator must report annually to the court and post a bond for the value of assets being managed, the child’s interests are well protected. However, conservatorships have ongoing administrative costs. Once the child turns eighteen, however, the conservator must deliver the assets to the child. Most parents do not want their children to have control over an inheritance at that age.

Fortunately, with basic estate planning, a conservatorship can be avoided.

Parents can dictate who will care for the children and who will manage the funds for the benefit of their children within their wills. This planning has options for the level of control the person has over the funds, either as custodian or trustee and allows you to decide at what age your children will receive their inheritance. 

STAY UP TO DATE

Subscribe to our newsletters

 
Subscribe to one or more of our newsletters, delivering meaningful insight on topics that matter to you and your family.
ebl home subscribe image

FURTHER READING

Latest Blog Posts

Estate planning is easy to delay, but waiting can lead to stress, confusion, and added expense. Learn from a Seattle estate planning lawyer why Washington residents of all ages and asset levels should consider creating or updating an estate plan now, not later.

Understand the Washington family law process from start to finish, including filing, hearings, discovery, and resolution, with help from a Seattle attorney.

Unmarried in Washington? Without the right estate plan, your partner may have no legal rights. Learn how to protect each other with help from a Seattle estate planning lawyer.

Learn how alternative dispute resolution — mediation or arbitration — can help resolve divorce issues in Washington without going to court.

Learn how community property laws, probate, and estate planning affect what you may owe for your deceased spouse's debts in Washington state.

Get book recommendations from a Seattle family law attorney experienced in high-conflict divorce if you're divorcing an asshole.

Hear from an experienced Seattle estate planning attorney how a simultaneous death clause could impact your Washington state estate plan.

Hear from a Seattle family law attorney how and why children often act out during a divorce and what you can do about it.

Learn from an experienced Seattle estate planning lawyer what happens if someone dies owing a debt. Does the debt go away when they die? The final article in a three-part series about probate in Washington state.

Divorce can do many things, including ruin summer camp for your kids if you let it. A Seattle family lawyer explains how not to allow this.