A Will Is a Starting Point, Not the Strategy
Many people take comfort in saying, “I have a Will.”
That is a sensible step, but it is only the beginning of proper estate planning.
A basic Will distributes assets – what it does not necessarily do is protect them.
For example, if assets pass outright to children, those assets may later become exposed to divorce, bankruptcy, creditors or poor financial decision-making.
In many cases, families unintentionally pass wealth directly into situations where it can be lost.
Similarly, leaving everything to a surviving spouse may appear straightforward, but it can create significant Inheritance Tax exposure on the second death if no further planning is in place.
Younger beneficiaries can also present challenges.
A large inheritance received at the age of 18 may not always be managed with the level of maturity that a lifetime of work deserves.
Effective estate planning therefore looks beyond simple distribution.
It considers the structure surrounding those assets and how they will be protected across future generations.
This may involve carefully drafted Trust provisions, flexible arrangements that adapt to changing family circumstances, and planning that takes account of taxation, family dynamics and asset protection.
In short, a Will is a document.
Estate planning is the framework that surrounds it.
Understanding the difference can make a profound impact on how successfully wealth passes from one generation to the next.