Handwritten Wills Beg for Family Arguments
To learn more about wills and what makes them legal, see Nolo's Wills area.
To learn more about wills and what makes them legal, see Nolo's Wills area.
When you're putting together your estate plan, don't forget to pass on the login names and passwords to your online accounts. Loved ones may need access to them when you're gone.
If you bank online, use online stock brokers, or if you conduct other business online -- maybe through eBay or PayPal -- your loved ones or your executor will need to close those accounts and distribute any remaining funds. Leaving clear access will make that job much easier.
Your loved ones may also want to retrieve contacts from your email account, preserve photos from your online photo library, or post a final entry onto your blog.
Accessing online accounts without the password can prove difficult, if not impossible. In an article for the Wall Street Journal, Katherine Roseman reports that each internet site makes its own rules about providing a deceased's account information. For example, to access a Gmail account, Google requires proof of death and provides access only to an estate administrator, while facebook won't provide account access at all but will put the account in a "memorial state."
You don't need a fancy document to leave this information. Just make a list of important accounts and store it with your other estate planning documents. For more information, see Nolo's article Help Your Executor: Secured Places and Passwords.
Betsy Simmons
While some people may not be ready for an estate plan, others need one yesterday. And lots of us fall somewhere in between no need and urgent need.
Here are ten situations in which you need some kind of estate plan. They're listed in decreasing urgency from "you need an estate plan, now" to "you know, should really think about making an estate plan."
Most people know that it's a good idea to have an estate plan. But estate planning is rarely high on one's list of things to do, so what most people really want to know is at what point to you really have to make one? For some the need is more urgent than for others.
How badly you need an estate plan depends on a number of circumstances in your life. These include: your marital status, how much stuff you have, if you have kids or other dependents, and if you care about what medical care you receive if you're incapacitated.
You don't really need an estate plan at all if:
Betsy Simmons
And, if you'd like to create your own custom estate plan, check out Nolo's bestselling Quicken WillMaker Plus.
Betsy Simmons