We Prepare Wills & Trusts Call 602-424-4154 for free answers to estate planning questions.
|
When you have no friends or family, who do you leave your estate to? Ray Fulk, a 71-year-old eccentric, died alone last summer. Having never been married, no children, and no close relatives or friends, Fulk left the bulk of his estate to 2 1980′s actors he never met, Kevin Brophy and Peter [...]
Your hard earned points from loyalty programs with hotels, airlines, and credit cards don’t have to go to waste after you die. According to Randy Petersen, editor of InsideFlyer magazine, U.S. travelers accumulate roughly 3 trillion frequent flyer miles each year. If you don’t do anything with your points and rewards, the value [...]
Today it seems like nearly everyone has some digital presence. Whether it is Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn or Gmail, almost everyone has some digital assets. When you start thinking about estate planning, you probably are thinking about the distribution of your assets: your home, car, business and other belongings. But what about your digital [...]
Email, Facebook, Twitter, and online banking have become as normal as breathing to most people. But what happens to these things when a person dies? The days of sorting through the deceased piles and piles of documents has ended. Many people today are totally reliant on their digital lives, from preparing and filing [...]
9News: “Some elements of planning out your estate are obvious, others not so much.
Increasingly your digital assets, everything from online bank accounts to frequent flier and rewards programs to social media are becoming a consideration for estate planning.
Financial writer Catey Hill suggests designating a “digital executor” to [...]
Question: I know I should leave the passwords for my computer / files / email / social media with my estate plan. What is the best way to do this?
Answer: Store a list of your important passwords somewhere safe that isn’t on your computer.
More and more people are using [...]
Question: I want to access the email account for my deceased loved one. How do I do this?
Answer: In many cases, you can contact the email provider and provide them some information demonstrating that you should have access to the account.
During the difficult time after a loved one passes, [...]
|
KEYTLaw, L.L.C.
3001 East Camelback Road, Suite 130
Phoenix, Arizona 85016
(602) 906-4953
|
Follow KEYTLaw