Is it legal to build your parent’s Wills in Australia?
Children are worried about the defacto death duties of CGT, income tax and stamp duty. Adult children, in particular, don’t want to pay the 32% Super non-dependency tax. Basic Testamentary Trusts and Super Proceeds Trusts are out of date. The 3-Generation Testamentary Trusts in Wills are necessary.
A client telephoned me…
His Dad died.
His Dad left no Will for his family, which included children and stepchildren. The family is tense. Defacto death duties such as CGT, income tax and stamp duty are appearing. The ATO ends up being one of the beneficiaries. The financial planner calculates a 32% tax on superannuation. Some of the assets are offshore. No one is sure who is in charge. It is denied by all, but his mum has a touch of dementia.
Three-Generation Testamentary Trust Wills protect my client and his wife. But his parents do not have even simple Wills. On reflection, he told me that he felt uncomfortable having that conversation with his mum and dad. His parents never bothered to get a Will of any sort. He feels that Mum and Dad left a mess behind. He is right.
Dying without a 3-Generation Testamentary Trust Will means the estate takes longer to settle and is more expensive. The estate is riddled with long-term death duties.
Talk to your parents before they lose mental capacity or die
No one wants to talk about building a tax-effective Will. But this is a conversation that you need to have with your parents – sooner rather than later. If your mum or dad die before they make their wishes known, tension and trouble erupt between family members. Right at a time when everyone needs to stick together.
Additionally, what if Mum and Dad lack mental capacity? If they have not built a Power of Attorney or Medical POAs, no one knows if they want their life artificially prolonged (or not). And, no one has the authority to enforce those wishes. This adds stress for the children.
How to talk to parents about Wills
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- Talk with your siblings
Talk with your siblings before approaching your parents. How do they feel about starting this conversation? It is best if you are all in it together. If possible, hold a family meeting about your parent’s Estate Planning.
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- What are your motives?
Why are you broaching the subject? Make it clear that you and your siblings are not bringing this up to define what you gain. This has nothing to do with you. Your motivation is:
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- to reduce the 4 de facto death duties payable on their estate – print out and share this Estate Planning Manual. Your mum and dad have paid enough taxes during their lifetime.
- avoid the 17% or 32% non-dependency superannuation tax payable by adult children
- honouring your parents’ wishes
- maintaining harmony in the family during a challenging time.
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The Will defines and protects your parent’ wishes.
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- Do your homework
Before you sit down with your parents, do your homework. For free, start building their Wills online here. Read the hints and watch the training videos. Print out the Summary Page. All for free. Also, print out the hints that may interest them. Telephone us if you need a hand.
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- Be sensitive
Building their Wills means your parents are considering their own death and their finances. Be sensitive and empathetic. Their trusted adviser and accountant stand ready to help.
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- Let them know that you have completed your Estate Planning
It doesn’t matter if you just turned 18 or 81. If you have money and possessions, especially if you own a home, then you need to build a 3-Generation Testamentary Trust Will. Completing your own estate planning is a fantastic way to open the topic with your parents. Let them know you have built tax effective Wills. Show them the covering letter you received when you built your Wills on our website.
Talk about the death taxes on their assets and superannuation. Ask if they want to build their estate planning documents as well. Or, ask them to review what you have done. This is a less threatening way to get them to think about death and taxes. If their children have a Will then they should have one too.
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- Can you build Wills for your parents?
Yes. You, the accountant and financial planner are legally able to build 3-Generation Testamentary Trust Wills on our law firm’s website. This is for your parents. However, be careful that you are not in a position of conflict:
- Get two witnesses to your parents’ Wills. They must not be well known to you or your siblings. The witnesses must have no loyalty or interest to you or your siblings.
- The two witnesses are beyond reproach – pillars of society.
- Make sure that no one is in the room when your parents sign the Wills in front of those two witnesses. If your parents are in isolation because of ill health, then follow this procedure.
- If you tick the box when building the Wills one of my lawyers telephones your parents to explain the Wills.
- Get a Doctor’s Certificate for each of your parents. This confirms that your parents are of sound mind. The cover letter that comes with their Wills gives the wording.
Free resources to protect young and vulnerable children
Free resources to help protect young and vulnerable children:
- Elder Abuse – protecting the children as well
- Life Estates are bad for both your children and your second spouse
- Child renounces a gift or Family Trust distribution for Centrelink and stop Trustee-in-Bankruptcy
- Children paying 32% on your super when you die
- Only disabled children can take your SMSF Reversionary Pension
- Vulnerable children in Wills – watch the training course
- Loans to children – when going bankrupt or divorcing
- Divorce Protection Trusts in Wills – in case a beneficiary, child or grandchild separates
- Making Wills for your children
- Special Disability Trusts – for disabled children
- Parent dies child pays 66% tax
- Dad’s Will: child vs charity
- Son loses farm to his two sisters
- Court makes a Statutory Will to protect children:
- Disabled dad has $9m, two children and no Will
- Court rewrites disabled Dad’s Will to protect children
Free legal advice from a law firm
At no charge, you, your parents, your accountant or your financial adviser can telephone Legal Consolidated. One of our specialist taxation and superannuation lawyers helps you answer the questions to build Wills on our website.
I am an Adjunct Professor lecturing both the Estate Planning and Superannuation units at a number of universities. I have done so since 1999.
I have 7 degrees, 4 of which are in law including my doctorate. My research was on Estate Planning and succession planning. Estate Planning is my passion, especially given the opportunity to reduce the four defacto death duties: income tax, Capital Gains Tax, transfer duty and the 32% death tax on your superannuation.
I author both of Australia’s leading Estate Planning books: CCH Australian Estate Planning and Thompson Reuters Australian Financial Planning Handbook.
You can build your Estate Planning documents online.
Start building the Estate Planning documents, read the hints and watch the training videos. If you need a hand answering any of the questions please ring me or any of my lawyers. But attempt the building process first. As it answers most questions.
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