Trusts & Estates

Trusts & Estates

Proper estate planning is essential to ensuring the orderly transfer of family assets, including business assets. Wealth transfer can occur both before and after your death. The goal of a well-designed estate plan is to ensure that your assets pass to those whom you wish to receive them, in the manner in which you wish those persons to receive your assets, and at a minimum cost in terms of administration expenses, court costs, attorney’s fees and taxes.

If you create a trust during your lifetime, then the provisions of your trust will control the disposition of the assets held in the name of the trust or transferred to the trust upon your death pursuant to your will. In many estate plans a revocable trust is the core planning document. If properly structured and funded, a revocable trust plan may avoid the need for a probate proceeding.

Good estate planning requires expert advice about tax law, business succession, contingency planning and property law. If you or a loved one becomes incapacitated or dies unexpectedly you will have peace of mind knowing everything is in order.

Areas of Expertise

  • Business Succession Planning
  • Charitable Gift Planning
  • Conservatorships
  • Estate & Gift Tax
  • Estate & Probate Litigation
  • Estate Planning
  • Farm Estate & Succession Planning
  • Guardianships
  • Health Care Directives & Living Wills
  • Medicaid, Medicare, Nursing Home & Elder Law
  • Probate
  • Wills, Trusts, Codicils & Powers of Attorney

Insights

  • May 1, 2025Family LawTrusts & Estates

    Family Law & Estate Planning Newsletter, Spring 2025

    In this issue: Read Full Newsletter


  • May 1, 2025Trusts & Estates

    Understanding Irrevocable Life Insurance Trusts: A Key Strategy for Estate Planning

    An irrevocable life insurance trust (“ILIT”) is exactly as it sounds. It is an irrevocable trust designed to hold one or more life insurance policies. A properly drafted ILIT provides the owner of a life insurance policy with several estate planning benefits, including estate tax avoidance and liquidity for estate tax obligations. An ILIT is...


  • May 1, 2025Trusts & EstatesEstate Planning

    Estate Planning for Blended Families in Minnesota: Understanding Spousal Rights and Inheritance in Blended Families

    The modern-day family has evolved beyond the traditional model. Blended families are more common and can create unique challenges when it comes to estate planning and inheritance. One challenge with estate planning for blended families can be balancing the needs of a surviving spouse with the inheritance rights of children from previous marriages. Minnesota’s probate...


  • May 1, 2025Trusts & EstatesEstate & Gift Tax

    Preparing for the Estate Tax (and Gift Tax) Exemption Sunset: What You Need to Know

    The federal government taxes the gratuitous transfer of property (transfers made without receiving compensation or value in return) made by a person during their life or as a result of their death. Most individuals in the United States will never pay federal gift or estate tax because these transfer taxes, for all practical purposes, only...


  • December 6, 2023Trusts & EstatesEstate Planning

    Incorporating Retirement Assets Into Your Estate Plan

    The Setting Every Community Up for Retirement Act ( also known as the Secure Act) became law on December 20, 2019, and went into effect in 2020. More recently, Congress enacted the SECURE 2.0 Act, with some of the provisions having already taken effect as of January 1, 2023. The SECURE Act and SECURE 2.0...