Estate Planning Training Course
FREE
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Welcome to Legal Consolidated’s Estate Planning training course.
The course is for accountants, financial planners and lawyers.
Welcome to Legal Consolidated’s Estate Planning training course. The course is for accountants, financial planners and lawyers.
I am an adjunct Professor, holding seven university degrees including a doctorate in Estate & Succession Planning. Since 1988, I have specialised, as a lawyer in Estate Planning, Superannuation and taxation.
I am pleased to offer a certificate of accreditation from Legal Consolidated. This is on completion of the online Estate Planning training Course.
- Click on the blue button and watch the training video
- After you watch the video you will be invited to build 3-Generation Testamentary Trust Mutual Wills
- Lock and Build to purchase the Mutual Wills and get your Completion Certificate
The Estate Planning Training Course covers:
- the 4 defacto death duties
- how to reduce the effect of these defacto death duties
- 3-Generation Testamentary Trust vs Testamentary Trusts
- spendthrift, bankrupt and mentally challenged beneficiaries
- explaining the different types of trusts contained in the Wills:
- 3-Generation Testamentary Trusts
- Super Testamentary Trust – to reduce the 17% or 32% tax on Super going to adult children
- Bankruptcy Trusts – if a beneficiary is bankrupt
- Maintenance Trust – where beneficiaries are under 18 years of age or unstable
- Mutual Wills vs Single Wills
The Estate Planning training course empowers you to build Wills on our law firm’s website, for your clients. You provide the financial planning and accounting advice and charge your clients for that advice. You can be confident and secure in the knowledge that we, and we alone, are providing the legal advice.
The training video answers many questions including:
QUESTION: Is the option to use the 3-Generation Testamentary trusts at the discretion of the executor (a choice)? What if there are minor children? Does the minor take over their trusts when they reach the age of majority?
ANSWER: If you build 3-Generation Testamentary Trusts for mum and dad (mutual) or for a single person you get many different trusts in the Will. Each beneficiary independently decides which ones he or she will use.
One of the benefits of a 3-Generation Testamentary Trust over a standard Testamentary Trust is that they are discretionary. Each beneficiary can decide to put some or all of their percentage of the estate into one or many 3-Generation Testamentary Trusts.
For example, the boy and girl get the assets from their dead parents 50/50. The boy decides not to set up any Testamentary Trusts (this is a shame as they save tax for up to 80 years). Instead, the boy just takes his 50% in his own name. The girl, on the advice of her accountant and financial planner, decides to set up 4 testamentary trusts for her 50%. She puts business assets into one 3-Generation Testamentary Trust and other assets in the others.
While the beneficiary is bankrupt, a minor or mentally unable to look after the money, then the Executors decides what trusts to best to set up. However, these automatically revert to 3-Generation Testamentary Trusts when the beneficiary is able to look after the wealth.
If there is Superannuation when you die, and if it goes into your Will then the Superannuation Testamentary Trust seeks to reduce the 17% or 32% non-dependancy tax to zero. If you have no superannuation when you die then the Superannuation Testamentary Trust just remains dormant. It is not activated.
Protects from death duties, divorcing and bankrupt children and a 32% tax on super. Build online with free lifetime updates:
Couples Bundle
includes 3-Generation Testamentary Trust Wills and 4 POAs
Singles Bundle
includes 3-Generation Testamentary Trust Will and 2 POAs
Death Taxes
- Australia’s four death duties
- 32% tax on superannuation to children
- Selling a dead person’s home tax-free
- HECs debt at death
- CGT on dead wife’s wedding ring
- Extra tax on Charities
Vulnerable children and spend-thrifts
- Your Will includes:
- Divorce Protection Trust if children divorce
- Bankruptcy Trusts
- Special Disability Trust (free vulnerable children in Wills Training Video)
- Guardians for under 18-year-old children
- Considered person clause to stop Will challenges
Second Marriages & Challenging Will
- Contractual Will Agreement for second marriages
- Wills for blended families
- Do Marriages and Divorce revoke my Will?
- Can my lover challenge my Will?
- Make my Will fair: hotchpot clauses v Equalisation?
What if I:
- have assets or beneficiaries overseas?
- lack mental capacity to sign my Will?
- sign my Will in hospital or isolating?
- lose my Will or my home burns down?
- have addresses changed in my Will?
- have nicknames and alias names?
- want free storage of my Wills and POAs?
- put Specific Gifts in Wills
- build my parent’s Wills?
- leave money to my pets?
- want my adviser or accountant to build the Will for me?
Assets not in your Will
- Joint tenancy assets and the family home
- Loans to children, parents or company
- Gifts and forgiving a debt before you die
- Who controls my Company at death?
- Family Trusts:
- Changing control with Backup Appointors
- losing Centrelink and winding up Family Trust
- Does my Family Trust go in my Will?
Power of Attorney
- Money POAs: NSW, VIC, QLD, WA, SA, TAS, ACT & NT
- be used to steal my money?
- act as trustee of my trust?
- change my Superannuation binding nomination?
- be witnessed by my financial planner witness?
- be signed if I lack mental capacity?
- Medical, Lifestyle, Guardianships, and Care Directives:
- Company POA when directors go missing, insane or die
After death
- Free Wish List to be kept with your Will
- Burial arrangements
- How to amend a Testamentary Trust after you die
- What happens to mortgages when I die?
- Family Court looks at dead Dad’s Will