How Can You Protect Your Heirs’ Inheritances from Their Creditors?
“The only person who sticks closer to you in adversity than a friend is a creditor.” (Unknown)
You’ve done everything you can to leave your loved ones financially secure after you die. You’ve left enough assets to set them up in their own lives, made a valid will (“Last Will and Testament”), and chosen a trustworthy and efficient executor to wind up your deceased estate. You think you’d done everything you can to help and safeguard them.
But what if you missed something – something that could be a real game-changer for your heirs?
Insolvency and attack by creditors
We’re talking here about one or more of your heirs getting themselves into serious debt. It really can happen to anyone. As the out-of-the-blue pandemic lockdowns confirmed, even the most prudent of people can find themselves unexpectedly in the dwang. The danger is that if your heirs’ personal estates are sequestrated, or if their creditors execute against their assets, their inheritances could be attached – and lost to your family forever.
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Fret not! There are ways to manage this risk whilst still ensuring that your heirs are looked after. Which route is best for you calls for specific legal advice. But here are the main options:
The last option, of course, is to leave it to your heirs to repudiate (reject) their inheritances after you die. That’s not a first prize solution as it requires your heirs to both understand the legal position and to repudiate at exactly the right time.
A will is only as good as its most recent review There are many good reasons to diarise regular reviews of your will: changing circumstances; new laws and taxes, the list goes on… But we’ve just added another reason. While conducting these reviews, consider whether any of your heirs could be at particular risk of financial distress and if so, how you can manage that risk
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