Focus on Intent

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With tax season now in the rearview mirror, we have a simple request: set aside 30 minutes and reread your estate planning documents.

Don't approach them with a legal eye. Leave that to your attorney. Instead, read them with a much simpler question in mind:

"Does this still reflect what I am trying to accomplish?"

Most estate plans are created during periods of transition. A business is sold. Children are young. Wealth begins to accumulate. Important decisions are made, documents are signed, and eventually a sense of relief sets in. The plan is complete.

Or at least it feels complete.

The reality is that estate plans, much like families, continue to evolve long after the ink has dried. Children grow into adults. Relationships deepen or drift apart. Assets change. New opportunities emerge. Priorities shift. Yet the structures we put in place often remain largely untouched.

What has increasingly captured our attention is not whether a plan is technically correct, but whether it has quietly become more complicated than necessary.

Complexity has a way of entering our lives disguised as prudence. We solve one problem with a trust. Another with an LLC. A third with a new account, a new provision, or a new layer of protection. Each decision may be entirely reasonable on its own. Over time, however, the accumulation of those decisions can create something very different from what was originally intended.

We've seen situations where a plan designed to create certainty instead created confusion. Where responsibilities became so fragmented that no one person fully understood the whole picture. Where the burden left to children or surviving spouses was not financial, but administrative.

That doesn't mean complexity is bad. Significant wealth often requires sophisticated planning. The question is whether the complexity serves a purpose or simply survives because no one has revisited it in years.

As you review your documents, don't focus on tax language, trustee powers, or legal terminology. Focus on intent.

If someone unfamiliar with your affairs had to carry out your wishes tomorrow, would the path be clear? Would your plan make life easier for the people you care about, or would it leave them with a puzzle to solve? Does the structure still reflect your priorities today, or the priorities you had fifteen years ago?

Good estate planning is not measured by the number of entities created or the thickness of the binder sitting on a shelf. It is measured by how clearly your intentions survive when life becomes complicated.

Sometimes the most valuable estate planning exercise isn't creating something new. It's simplifying what already exists.

Call us if you would like a fresh set of eyes reviewing your documents and intent.