Partnering For Your Future™.
How Much Life Insurance is Enough?
You are probably aware of the importance of having enough life insurance coverage to handle the financial contingencies that may affect your family in the event of your death. However, determining the necessary amount of life insurance can be complicated. One general rule of thumb is that you should have enough coverage to equal five to seven times your annual salary. However, you may want to determine the "right" amount of life insurance coverage with a careful "needs analysis," rather than using an arbitrary formula. The needs analysis approach incorporates an evaluation of your family's most important financial obligations and goals. This leads to planning insurance coverage to help address mortgage debt, college expenses, and future family income, as well as to provide liquidity for meeting future estate tax liabilities. As you develop an insurance strategy, remember to analyze your existing policies and consider other resources that may be available to your family, such as retirement benefits and savings. Remember, having the proper life insurance coverage can play a major role in any family's financial protection.
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Gene G. Stern, CLU®, CRPC, CFP®
President
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Gene.Stern@LFG.com

The Planning Process: Estate Planning

Estate planning is the careful consideration of a variety of usually complex legal and tax issues that affect the distribution of your estate after your death. The result may be a written plan that includes the potential valuation of your property, estate tax estimates and recommendations that may help protect the distribution of your estate. An estate plan also may recommend the establishment of trusts and a plan for charitable giving.

Estate planning lets you know how much there is to leave your heirs. You decide how your estate is to be distributed and who is to be the executor of your estate. Proper estate planning helps keep the state or others from distributing your estate.

At the heart of implementing your estate planning is the Will, a document written by an attorney that transfers the real estate and personal property you own at the time of your death to your heirs or those you designate. In addition, you can create a trust, a written document that distributes your assets to your beneficiaries and helps to avoid probate at the time of your death. It also can help to save on taxes.

You also can help reduce the size of your estate and subsequently the tax liability of your estate through gifting.

When should you consider estate planning? When you approach amassing real estate and personal property worth more than $1.5 million. A well-crafted estate plan is one way to help minimize federal taxes on large estates. Taxable estates valued at $1.5 million (increasing to $3.5 million by the year 2009) or less are free of federal estate taxation. The federal estate tax is repealed for 2010; however,in 2011, the estate tax will be restored utilizing a $1 million exemption amount, unless action is taken by Congress.