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- The Hidden Cost of an Estate Plan Where Your Will, Business, and Medical Wishes Don't Align
Emma thought she had it handled. The Will was done. Her Lasting Power of Attorney ("LPA") was signed and certified. She'd even sat through a conversation with her financial adviser about her investment portfolio and walked away feeling, for the first time in years, like an adult who had her affairs in order. Then her brother — the executor she'd named in the Will — called to ask a simple question: what did she want to happen to her business if she became mentally incapacitated but hadn't died? Emma didn't have an answer. The Will only kicked in after death. The LPA gave her donee authority over her personal welfare and finances. But who had authority to make decisions about how the business was run? Nobody had ever looked at her business and her LPA in the same room. She had documents that each did their job. What she didn't have was anyone who had ever checked whether they worked together. What Is the Real Cost of a Misaligned Estate Plan? Most people don't find out their plan has gaps until the gaps become expensive. By then, the cost isn't just financial — it's time, family conflict, and decisions made by people who didn't know what you actually wanted. The hidden cost isn't that any single document was done badly. It's that documents done perfectly well in isolation can still contradict each other, leave authority gaps, or fail to account for what another part of the plan assumes. Each part was handled. None of it was coordinated. And that gap — between handled and coordinated — is where plans fall apart when it matters most. Why Do Your Will, Business, and Medical Wishes Need to Be Part of One Plan? Because they each affect the others — and most people never ask anyone to check whether they do. Your Will deals with what happens after death. Your LPA deals with what happens if you lose mental capacity while still alive. Your business succession plan determines who runs and owns your company through either of those events. Your Advance Care Plan records your healthcare preferences if you can no longer speak for yourself. Each is usually prepared separately, often by different professionals working within their own areas of expertise. But these parts of your life are not separate. What your LPA authorises can affect your business during a medical crisis. Whether your finances can actually support your care preferences may never have been reviewed across legal, financial, and healthcare considerations together. Each professional does their job well. The challenge is making sure every part of the plan works together cohesively when real-life situations arise. When these documents are aligned, they reinforce each other. When they aren't, each one creates a gap the others can't fill. Who Is Most at Risk? Certain situations make misalignment almost inevitable — and the consequences far more serious. Business owners. Your personal estate and your business are one problem with two faces. Your shareholders' agreement may restrict how shares can be transferred — but does your Will account for that? Business continuity depends not only on who ultimately owns the business, but also who has authority to make operational decisions during incapacity or after death. Who has authority to keep the business running if you lose capacity before you die? If your incapacity planning and business succession arrangements are not coordinated, your business may face operational uncertainty at exactly the moment it is most vulnerable. People with assets across borders. Assets in other countries are governed by the laws of those countries. Your Singapore Will may not be recognised in every jurisdiction where you hold assets. Without specific arrangements for each, the assets you worked hardest to accumulate may be the ones your family struggles most to access. People with complex family structures. Consider a man with children from a first marriage and a second wife. His Will leaves everything to his current wife, intending she will provide for all the children. But without a trust or specific conditions written in, she has no legal obligation to do so. The document did exactly what it was told. It just wasn't told the full picture. What Does It Take to Get This Right? It starts with having one place where everything is visible — your legal arrangements, your financial structure, your business interests, your medical wishes — and something that can show you where they connect and where they don't. A good place to start is YEPPA, Immortalize's digital concierge for elderhood planning. It guides you through every area of your life — legal, financial, medical, and personal — in a structured way, helping you connect important decisions, surface gaps, and keep everything organised in one place. If your situation is relatively straightforward, YEPPA gives you the tools to get your plan properly in order at your own pace. But for some people, a platform isn't enough. Your shareholders' agreement needs to be read against your Will. Your LPA scope needs to be confirmed against your business succession plan. Your advisers — legal, financial, medical — need to be working from the same picture. That requires a person, not just a process. This is what Immortalize's Prime Concierge is built for. What is Immortalize's Prime Concierge? A dedicated person who understands your full situation, helps coordinate across legal, financial, medical, and personal planning considerations together with your relevant professional advisers, identifies where documents or arrangements may not align, manages providers, and helps oversee execution end to end. Not one adviser's slice of your life — but a more coordinated view of the whole picture. Built for people with real complexity, or those who simply prefer to have someone help organise and coordinate everything on their behalf. When the active engagement ends, everything is documented inside your YEPPA account so YEPPA takes over ongoing monitoring at a fraction of the cost. Common Myths That Keep People From Getting This Right What Should You Do Next? The best place to start is simply trying YEPPA. It will walk you through every area of your life — legal, financial, medical, and personal — in a structured way, and show you exactly where your plan stands. For many people, that process alone surfaces gaps they didn't know existed. Work through it at your own pace. See what comes up. If you find yourself working through YEPPA and realising the gaps are larger and more interconnected than you'd expected, it may be more time and cost efficient to have someone who knows the industry coordinate it all. Use the checklist below as an honest gut-check. If you're ticking crosses, it's worth having a conversation with us. A Plan That Actually Holds Six months after that call with her brother, Emma finally had a plan that matched the complexity of her actual life. Not a collection of documents spread across different professionals, each unaware of the others. One plan, properly coordinated, with the right people knowing exactly what to do. Prime Concierge carried the weight of coordination. YEPPA kept everything quietly in motion, surfacing only what truly needed her attention. And when life changes — as it inevitably will — she knows she isn't navigating it alone. Frequently Asked Questions Q: What does it mean for a Will, a business, and medical wishes to be "aligned"? A: It means each part of your plan has been checked against the others so they don't contradict each other or leave authority gaps. Your incapacity arrangements, corporate documents, and legal authorisations are structured so the right people can continue managing key business and financial matters if you lose capacity. Your care preferences are financially backed, not just verbally expressed. Your key people have access to the right information and know exactly what their role requires. Aligned means coordinated, not just complete. Q: Do I need an Advance Care Plan if I already have an LPA in Singapore? A: They serve different purposes. An LPA appoints someone to act on your behalf. An ACP records your personal preferences around medical treatment — the kind of care you do and don't want — so that doctors and family have meaningful guidance rather than having to guess. Q: What happens to my business if I lose mental capacity before I die? A: If your LPA doesn't specifically cover business decision-making, and there is no formalised succession plan, there may be no one with clear authority to manage the business. Your shareholders' agreement may restrict what anyone else can do with your shares, leaving the business without effective leadership at exactly the moment it needs it most. Q: Can my Singapore Will cover assets I hold in other countries? A: Not always. Whether your Singapore Will is recognised depends on the laws of the country where those assets are held. People with assets across multiple jurisdictions often benefit from having jurisdiction-specific arrangements coordinated together rather than relying on a single Will drafted in isolation. Q: What is Prime Concierge and how is it different from using YEPPA on my own? A: YEPPA guides you through every area of elderhood planning — structured, comprehensive, and at your own pace. Prime Concierge builds on top of that, adding a dedicated human layer: a real person who works alongside YEPPA and coordinates with your relevant professional advisers — legal, financial, and medical — to review your full situation, identify where your documents conflict or leave gaps, and handle execution end to end. It's built for people with real complexity in their lives, or those who simply prefer to have someone coordinate and sort out everything on their behalf. Q: What is a Letter of Wishes and why does it matter? A: A Letter of Wishes captures everything that's harder to convey through legal documents — your intentions, your values, your preferences for how things should be handled. It gives your family and advisers the context they need to carry out your wishes in the spirit you intended. Immortalize's Letter of Wishes feature guides you through creating one as part of your broader plan. Q: What is a Schedule of Assets and why do I need one? A: A Schedule of Assets is a comprehensive record of everything you own — bank accounts, properties, investments, business interests, insurance policies, digital assets — organised in one place. Without one, your family may not even know what exists, let alone how to access it. Immortalize's Schedule of Assets helps you build and maintain this record so it's always current and accessible to the right people. This article is intended for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, tax, or estate planning advice. Laws and regulations vary by country and individual circumstances differ. Please consult a qualified legal or financial professional for advice specific to your situation.
- The Elderhood Checklist: How to Know If You're Actually Prepared
Emma has a good life. A steady career, two grown children, a home she's proud of. She's thought about getting her affairs in order — more than once. After her father passed two years ago and the family spent months untangling paperwork nobody knew existed, she told herself: I won't do that to my kids. But here she is, two years later. Still meaning to start. Still not sure where to begin. If that sounds familiar, you're not alone. Most people who haven't planned don't avoid it because they don't care. They avoid it because nobody has ever shown them the full picture — what actually needs to be in place, in what order, and why it matters. That's exactly what Immortalize's Elderhood Checklist is for. What Is an Elderhood Checklist — and Why Is It Different From a Will? An elderhood checklist is a structured planning guide that covers every area of ageing and legacy preparation: legal, medical, financial, and personal. A will is one item on that checklist. It is not the checklist itself. Most people think having a will means they're sorted. They're not. A will only activates after you die, and only covers assets held in your name. It says nothing about who makes medical decisions if you're incapacitated, which insurance policies are still active, or what you want done with decades of family photographs. Those gaps are where families struggle — not because they didn't love each other, but because nobody thought to document the answers while there was still time. Why Most People Don't Know What They're Missing The problem isn't laziness. It's that elderhood planning has no obvious starting point. You know a will is important. You've heard about something called a Lasting Power of Attorney (LPA) — a legal document that lets you appoint someone to make decisions on your behalf if you lose mental capacity. You might have a vague sense that you should write down your financial accounts somewhere. But nobody hands you a map. Nobody tells you what order to do things in, or what you haven't even thought to consider yet. That's the real risk. Not the things you know you're missing — but the things you don't know you're missing. In Singapore, for example, adults who haven't made an LPA leave their families with no legal authority to manage their affairs if they lose capacity. Without one, the family may need to apply to the court to appoint a deputy — someone legally authorised to act on your behalf. It is a process that is slow, expensive, and emotionally draining for everyone involved. This is one item on an elderhood checklist. Most people have never thought about it at all. What a Proper Elderhood Checklist Actually Covers A well-structured elderhood checklist doesn't just list tasks. It organises them into the areas of your life where preparation actually matters. Legal: Do you have a will? An LPA or equivalent power of attorney? Have you named an executor who knows they've been named and where to find the document? Medical: Have you documented your healthcare wishes? Does someone you trust know what interventions you do and don't want if you can no longer speak for yourself? Financial: Are your bank accounts, investments, insurance policies, and debts documented somewhere accessible? Do your beneficiary nominations reflect your actual wishes — or the ones you filled in fifteen years ago and never updated? Personal: Have you thought about what happens to your home, your digital accounts, your sentimental possessions? Have you had the conversations your family will need to have one day, while you're still here to have them? Each of these areas has more depth than a single question suggests. And within each area, there are items most people have genuinely never considered. That's not a criticism. It's just the reality of planning for something nobody teaches you how to do. How Does Immortalize's Elderhood Checklist Work? Immortalize's Elderhood Checklist isn't a generic template you download and fill in. It's built through a structured three-stage process that starts with who you are and gets more personalised at every step. Stage 1: Elderhood Persona Quiz You start by answering a short set of questions about your life stage, situation, and circumstances. Based on your answers, the platform generates a template checklist matched to your demographic group. It's the fastest way to go from nothing to a structured starting point. Stage 2: Optimisation People in the same demographic group can have very different needs and preferences. This is where the checklist becomes truly yours. You answer further questions to fine-tune it, and at the same time begin building out other areas of your plan — your connections, your assets, your key relationships. The optimisation phase refines your checklist and starts filling in the broader picture of your elderhood plan simultaneously. Stage 3: Letter of Wishes For those who want to go further, Immortalize's Letter of Wishes takes the process to its fullest depth. This is where you work through everything you want on record — your wishes, your intentions, your instructions for the people who will need them. It's the most complete expression of your plan, and the stage that gives your family the clearest possible picture of what you wanted. Once you're through the process, you have a checklist you can actually act on. Check off what's done, mark what's in progress, and expand any unfinished item for clear next steps and links to tools that help you move forward. You can also add your own items at any point. And through every stage of it, you're not doing this alone. YEPPA, Immortalize's built-in digital concierge, runs through all of it. YEPPA doesn't just remind you what's on the list. It helps you understand why each item matters, flags what's most urgent for your situation, and keeps everything current as your life changes. Are You More Prepared Than You Think — or Less? Four Steps to Take This Week You don't need to complete your entire elderhood plan this weekend. You just need to start. Here's where to begin. Complete the Elderhood Persona Quiz. Answer a short set of questions and the platform generates a checklist matched to your life stage and circumstances. It takes minutes and gives you an immediate picture of where you stand. Go through the Optimisation phase. This is where your checklist stops being a template and becomes specific to you. You'll refine your planning preferences and begin building out your connections, your assets, and other areas of your plan at the same time. Expand one unfinished item and take one action. Every incomplete item on your checklist has clear next steps. Pick one thing and do it this week. You don't have to know what to do. The checklist tells you. Consider going through the Letter of Wishes. If you want the most complete picture, Immortalize's Letter of Wishes takes you through everything your family will need to know — your wishes, your intentions, and your instructions. It's the fullest version of your plan. Emma opened the Elderhood Persona Quiz on a Sunday afternoon...... Five minutes later, she had a checklist. It wasn't finished and there were gaps she hadn't considered at all. No LPA. No documented healthcare wishes. No record of her insurance policies in one place. She didn't fix everything that afternoon. But for the first time, she could see exactly what needed doing. That clarity of just knowing the full picture was the thing she'd been putting off without realising it. That's what Immortalize's Elderhood Checklist gives you. Not a finished plan. A real starting point. And it takes five minutes to get there. Frequently Asked Questions Q: Do I need a lawyer to use the Elderhood Checklist? A: No. The checklist helps you understand what needs to be in place and guides you toward the right next steps. Some items, like drafting a will or registering an LPA, may involve a legal professional, and the checklist will point you toward those where relevant. Q: Is the Elderhood Checklist only for older people? A: No. The checklist is relevant for any adult who has dependants, owns assets, or wants their wishes documented. Starting earlier simply means more time to get things in order without pressure. Q: What's the difference between YEPPA and the Elderhood Checklist? A: The Elderhood Checklist is a structured planning tool — one feature within the Immortalize platform. YEPPA is Immortalize's built-in digital concierge that guides you through the entire planning process, including the checklist. Think of YEPPA as the guide and the checklist as one of the tools it uses. Q: Is the checklist free? A: Creating your Elderhood Checklist is free with an Immortalize account. YEPPA Premium unlocks deeper guidance across your plan. You can try it free for 7 days. Q: I already have a will. Does the checklist still apply to me? A: Almost certainly yes. A will is one item on the checklist. Most people who have a will still have significant gaps in their medical, financial, and personal planning. The checklist will show you exactly where those gaps are. This article is intended for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, tax, or estate planning advice. Laws and regulations vary by country and individual circumstances differ. Please consult a qualified legal or financial professional for advice specific to your situation.
- What Is a Letter of Wishes and Why Most People May Need It More Than a Will
Picture this. Your mother has had a stroke. She's in hospital, conscious but unable to speak. She has a will. She even has a Lasting Power of Attorney (LPA) in place, meaning she appointed a trusted person to make decisions on her behalf if she ever lost mental capacity. But now your family is standing around her bed, trying to figure out what she would actually want. Does she want every possible medical intervention, or would she prefer comfort over aggressive treatment? She mentioned once she hated hospitals. Does that mean something now? She was particular about her appearance her whole life. Will anyone know to make sure she's kept clean and dressed with care? Nobody thinks about asking these questions until a crisis forces the conversation. And because she never wrote any of it down, the people who love her most are left guessing at the worst possible time. This is the gap that a Letter of Wishes is designed to fill. What Is a Letter of Wishes? A Letter of Wishes (LOW) is a non-legally binding document where you record your preferences, values, and intentions in your own words. It is not a will. It is not an LPA. It sits alongside those documents and helps fill the personal and practical gaps they often leave behind: the why behind your decisions, the how behind your care, and the things only you would know to mention. Because it is not legally binding, a Letter of Wishes gives you the freedom to explain your values, preferences, reasoning, and personal guidance, without the formality, complexity, or cost of trying to fit every personal detail into a legal document. And because it is not set in stone, you can update it whenever your circumstances or preferences change. A LOW can cover three areas most people never properly plan for: If you lose mental capacity How you want to be cared for, medically and personally, if you can no longer communicate. End of life Your wishes around medical intervention, funeral arrangements, and what should happen after. Legacy Messages for the people you love, the reasoning behind your decisions, and what you want them to know. Why a Will and LPA Are Not Enough On Their Own A comprehensive will, LPA, and healthcare planning documents such as an Advance Care Plan (ACP) or Advance Medical Directive (AMD) form the legal and practical backbone of any solid estate plan. Done well, they are essential. But even the most thorough legal and healthcare documents have a ceiling on what they can express. A will tells people what should happen to your assets after death. An LPA gives someone the legal authority to make decisions on your behalf if you lose mental capacity. An ACP helps record your preferences for future medical care if you become unable to communicate them yourself, while an AMD specifically relates to extraordinary life-sustaining treatment in terminal illness situations. But none of these documents are really designed to answer the deeply personal questions that arise in real life. Who should care for your ageing pet if something happens to you? Would you prefer to remain at home for as long as possible instead of moving into institutional care? If your children inherit money young, what values or guidance would you want them to receive alongside it? If family members disagree about your care, what principles would you want decisions anchored around? What comforts, routines, relationships, religious practices, or personal boundaries matter most to you when you are vulnerable? These are not usually legal questions. They are human ones. Even when formal documents are comprehensive, they often cannot fully capture the personal context, preferences, routines, values, and trade-offs that shape how decisions should be carried out in real life. And real life is rarely black and white. Families, caregivers, doctors, donees, deputies, and executors are often forced to navigate grey areas: balancing independence against safety, quality of life against longevity, family expectations against personal wishes, or financial practicality against emotional significance. Formal documents can provide authority and structure, but they cannot anticipate every situation or interpret every nuance on your behalf. That is the role of a Letter of Wishes - to help guide the people making decisions for you when the answers are not obvious. Not just by telling them what you wanted, but by helping them understand your values, priorities, boundaries, and the reasoning behind your wishes. What Are the Limitations of a Letter of Wishes? A Letter of Wishes is a powerful planning tool, but it is important to understand what it cannot do. Because it is not legally binding, it depends significantly on the people around you caring about and acting on your preferences. If you are in the care of someone who does not respect your wishes, a LOW alone cannot force compliance. It has no legal teeth. This means a LOW works best when it sits alongside trusted people in your life: family members, close friends, or appointed professionals who genuinely have your interests at heart. If you have concerns about whether anyone in your life will honour your preferences, or if you do not have a trusted person to take on that responsibility, you may want to consider engaging professional services such as a professional donee, in addition to writing your wishes down. A Letter of Wishes is a record of your intentions. Making sure those intentions are carried out is a matter of who you trust, and how you set up your broader plan. The Problem With Having Multiple Letters of Wishes Letters of Wishes are not new. Many professionals already use them. A trust arrangement often comes with one. A will may be accompanied by one. Some solicitors prepare them as part of estate planning. An ACP, while distinct from a traditional Letter of Wishes, serves a similar purpose within the healthcare context by helping communicate a person’s care preferences. So the issue most people face is not that they have no Letter of Wishes. It is that they have several, created at different times, with different professionals, for different purposes, and held in different places. Each was written to serve a specific arrangement. Each may have been updated independently, or not updated at all. Over time, they can fall out of sync with each other and with what you actually want now. In a crisis, the people responsible for helping you may each be working from a different version of your preferences, without knowing the others exist. The stronger approach is to maintain one central, personally owned record of your wishes that you control and keep current. Relevant sections can be shared with the appropriate professionals and family members as needed, so everyone is working from the same foundation. When you update it, the people you have authorised see the latest version. You say it once. The right people receive what is relevant to them. This is what Immortalize's Letter of Wishes is designed to be: not a replacement for the guidance your professionals already hold, but the single source that keeps everything consistent. How Immortalize's Letter of Wishes Works Immortalize's Letter of Wishes generator is built around exactly this principle: one complete document, shared smartly. Write once. Share selectively. Your solicitor receives only the sections relevant to your will. Your doctor gets your medical preferences. Your caregivers get your care instructions. Everyone gets what they need, nothing more. Always current. When you update your LOW, everyone you have given access to automatically has the latest version. No printing, no re-sending, no chasing. Guided from start to finish. The generator walks you through everything with simple questions and ready-made options. Most people already know what matters to them. The challenge is organising those thoughts clearly before a crisis forces others to guess. Connected to your full plan through YEPPA. YEPPA is Immortalize's built-in digital concierge. As you complete your LOW, YEPPA automatically links it to your Schedule of Assets, your Connections, and your Elderhood Checklist, keeping your entire plan organised and in sync. Saves you money on professional time. When you arrive at a lawyer, doctor, or financial adviser already knowing what you want, you spend their time on real decisions. Fewer meetings, fewer revisions, lower costs. When Should You Write Yours? Now. Before you need it. Most people wait for a trigger: a health scare, a parent's death, a significant birthday. By then, decisions are being made under pressure, with less clarity and more emotion. There is a practical reason to start early too. If you write your Letter of Wishes before meeting a lawyer, doctor, or financial adviser, you walk into those appointments already knowing what you want. You spend their time on decisions, not on figuring out your preferences in real time. Fewer meetings. Fewer revisions. Lower costs. If you have already completed your will or LPA, your Letter of Wishes adds the missing layer: the context, the reasoning, and the personal instructions that give the people you have appointed the confidence to act on your behalf clearly. Action Steps Start today, even with one section. You do not need to complete your LOW in one sitting. Pick the area most urgent to you, whether that is care preferences, messages for your children, or funeral wishes, and begin there. Tell someone it exists. A Letter of Wishes is only useful if the right people can find it. Use Immortalize's Connections feature to assign access to the people responsible for different parts of your plan. Review it once a year. Set a reminder on your birthday or at the new year. Your preferences will evolve. Your LOW should too. Use it before your next professional appointment. If you are seeing a lawyer, doctor, or financial adviser about any aspect of your future, bring your LOW with you. It will make every conversation more focused and more useful. One Letter. Everything It Takes to Be Understood. Your family will not know what they do not know. And they will not think to ask the questions they do not know to ask. A Letter of Wishes is how you answer those questions before they become a crisis. Frequently Asked Questions Q: Is a Letter of Wishes legally binding in Singapore? A: No, a Letter of Wishes is not a legally enforceable document. Its value lies in the personal guidance it gives to the people acting on your behalf, not in legal compulsion. If you need certain preferences to be legally protected, speak to a lawyer about incorporating them into your will, LPA, trust or other legal instruments instead. Q: What is the difference between a Letter of Wishes and an Advance Care Plan (ACP)? A: An Advance Care Plan is a specific document used within Singapore's healthcare system to record your medical care preferences. A Letter of Wishes is broader and more personal. It covers care instructions, legacy messages, financial guidance, funeral preferences, and more, and is not limited to the medical setting. Q: Can I write a Letter of Wishes without a lawyer? A: Yes. No legal professional is required to write a Letter of Wishes. You can write it yourself, or use Immortalize's Letter of Wishes generator, which walks you through every section with structured prompts. That said, once written, it is strongly recommended that you share your LOW with the people responsible for carrying out your wishes and go through it with them directly. This gives them a chance to ask questions and clarify anything they are unsure about while you are still able to explain your intentions, reducing the risk of misinterpretation when it matters most. Q: What should a Letter of Wishes include? A: At minimum, it should cover your personal care preferences if you lose mental capacity, your wishes around end-of-life medical decisions, your funeral preferences, context around important estate decisions, and any personal messages for loved ones or dependents. Q: What if the people responsible for me don't follow my Letter of Wishes? A: Because a LOW is not legally binding, it cannot compel anyone to act on your preferences. It works best when paired with people you genuinely trust, whether family, friends, or appointed professionals. If you have concerns about this, consider whether a professional donee, professional executor, or trust arrangement might provide the additional safeguards you need. Q: When should I update my Letter of Wishes? A: Any time your circumstances change significantly, such as after a marriage, divorce, new child, major health change, or a shift in your financial situation. A good habit is to review it at least once a year. This article is intended for general educational purposes only and does not constitute legal, medical, or financial advice. Where appropriate, seek advice from qualified professionals regarding your specific circumstances.
- What Is a Schedule of Assets and Why Every Adult Needs One
Emma knew her husband of 34 years better than anyone. She knew his phone PIN, his email password, and the name of his secondary school best friend. What she did not know was the savings account that he had opened decades ago and never mentioned. Or the life insurance policy he had taken out in his forties, paid up in full, and completely forgotten about. Or the investment account linked to an email address he no longer used. She was not unprepared for grief. She was unprepared for the spreadsheet. The calls started the week after the funeral. The bank. The pension provider. His former employer from a job he had left nearly a decade ago. Each one asked for documents she was still gathering. Each one had its own process, its own timeline, its own definition of what counted as proof. Some accounts surfaced quickly. Others took months. The great irony? It would have taken him ten minutes to write it all down. What Is a Schedule of Assets? A Schedule of Assets is a record of everything you own and owe. Bank accounts, property, investments, insurance policies, pensions, digital assets, and valuables. Not just what you have, but preferably where it is held, how it is held, and what someone would actually need to find it and access it. It is not a will. It does not replace any legal document you already have in place. But without it, every legal document you have put in place is harder to act on. An executor cannot distribute assets they cannot find. A family cannot claim funds they do not know exist. Why Your Family Cannot Work This Out Without You The assumption most people make is that their family will figure it out. They will go through the files, check the emails, call a few places. It will take a little time but they will get there. Here's what that actually looks like in practice. Without a clear record, your family may be forced to guess which financial institutions you’ve had accounts or relationships with and contact each one individually, or attempt to reach out to all of them. They need the right documents at every step. A death certificate. Legal authority to act on your behalf. Sometimes a solicitor. Sometimes a court application. Each institution has a different process and a different waiting period. They need to trace insurance policies with no list of insurers and no policy numbers. A policy you finished paying for years ago and quietly filed away is not easy to find when the person who took it out is no longer here to ask. They need to find pension entitlements from jobs held years ago. They need to establish whether you held digital assets and, if so, where the access details are. Some assets surface eventually. Some never do. And the uncertainty, the nagging sense that there might be more they have not found yet, does not just cause delays. It causes confusion and conflict, at exactly the time your family can least afford either. Who Is This For? Anyone who owns anything. The sandwich generation. You watched your siblings spend months untangling your parent's finances after they passed. You know exactly how that felt. You are not putting your own family through the same thing. The quietly wealthy accumulator. You have pension pots from previous jobs, a savings account you opened in your thirties, and investments you set up years ago. If someone asked you to list everything you own right now, you could not. Neither could anyone else. The business owner. Your assets do not sit neatly in one place. Shares in your company, a commercial property, personal savings, a life policy from years ago. It is complicated, and nobody has the full picture. The recently divorced. You spent years building a life together. Now it is yours alone. New accounts, different assets, a financial picture that has changed completely. If something happened tomorrow, would anyone know what you have and where to find it? The health scare. A diagnosis. A close call. Something shifted. You have always known you would get around to this eventually, but eventually just got a lot closer. The expat or globally mobile. Property in two countries. Bank accounts in three. A pension from a job you had overseas a decade ago. The complexity alone is reason enough to write it down. How Well Do You Actually Know Your Own Financial Picture? What Makes Immortalize's Schedule of Assets Different Most people who try to create an asset list start a spreadsheet, stare at it for twenty minutes, and close it. The problem is not effort or intention. It is structure. Without prompts, it is hard to know what to include, what level of detail actually matters, or even where to begin. Immortalize's Schedule of Assets is built around the way this task actually needs to work. You start with checkboxes, not a blank page. Just tick the categories of assets you have. Property, bank accounts, insurance, investments, vehicles, digital assets. That is it. You can stop there, and you already have more than most people leave behind. When you are ready, you go deeper, adding the detail that would actually matter to someone trying to find and access each asset. Guidance is built in at every step. Where a field might cause confusion, Immortalize explains what it means, why it matters, and what someone would need it for. You are never left guessing what to put. Your assets connect to your wider plan. As you record each asset, YEPPA, Immortalize's built-in digital concierge, works in the background to flag considerations for your planning. A business shareholding prompts a review of succession planning. A property may prompt inheritance arrangements. Your record does not sit in isolation. It becomes the starting point for a complete plan built around your actual circumstances. Sharing is controlled and always current. You choose who sees your Schedule of Assets and at what level of access. Your partner, your executor, a trusted family member. They always see the latest version automatically. No outdated printouts. No version confusion. No one working from a copy that is three years out of date. Action Steps: Where to Start You do not need to complete this all at once. A partial record created today is worth more than a perfect one you never start. Now: Open Immortalize's Schedule of Assets and tick the categories you know you have. Bank accounts, property, insurance, investments. Do not worry about details yet. Just create the structure. Before the end of the quarter: Go back and add the details that matter. Account numbers. Policy references. Where documents are physically stored. Think back to accounts you opened years ago, policies you may have finished paying, and pension entitlements from past employers. Ongoing: Use the notifications feature (Coming soon!) on your Immortalize dashboard to set a reminder to review your Schedule of Assets once a year or after any major life change. A new account, a new property, or a change in business ownership are all reasons to update. Grief Is Hard Enough Without a Financial Treasure Hunt Emma eventually pieced it together. Months of calls, paperwork, and chasing institutions she had never heard of. But it did not need to be that way. One document. One afternoon. That is all it would have taken. Frequently Asked Questions Q: Is a Schedule of Assets a legal document? A: No. It is a practical record, not a legal instrument. It does not replace your Will, Lasting Power of Attorney, or any other legal document. What it does is make those documents usable by giving your family the information they need to act on them. Q: Does a will cover all my assets? A: A will distributes the assets that form your probate estate, but only the ones your executor can locate. Certain assets, such as jointly held property and life insurance policies with named beneficiaries, may pass outside your will entirely. Without a Schedule of Assets, even a carefully drafted will leaves gaps. Q: What should I include in a Schedule of Assets? A: Bank and savings accounts including old or dormant ones, property, investment and brokerage accounts, retirement and pension entitlements from all employers, insurance policies including fully paid-up ones, business interests, vehicles, digital assets, and any foreign assets, overseas accounts, and other assets you may hold. For each one, record where it is held, how it is held, any reference numbers, and where physical documents are stored. Q: How often should I update my Schedule of Assets? A: At minimum once a year, and after any significant life change. A new property, a new financial account, or a change in business ownership are all good reasons to review and update your record. This article is intended for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, tax, or estate planning advice. Laws and regulations vary by country and individual circumstances differ. Please consult a qualified legal or financial professional for advice specific to your situation.
- Connections by Immortalize: Record Who's in Charge Before a Crisis Hits
When Emma's mother collapsed at home on a Tuesday afternoon, the ambulance arrived in eight minutes. The family took considerably longer to get their act together. Emma was the eldest. Her brother was overseas. Their mother had a financial advisor, a lawyer, and a doctor she'd seen for fifteen years but nobody had their contact details. The hospital needed to know if she had an advance care plan. Nobody knew. They needed to know who had authority to make medical decisions. Nobody knew that either. All of that information existed. It just wasn't written down anywhere anyone could find it. That's the problem Immortalize's Connections feature is designed to solve. What Is Immortalize's Connections Feature? Connections is a feature inside Immortalize — a digital elderhood planning platform — where you record every person who plays a role in your life and your plan. Their role, their relationship to you, and what they're allowed to access. That includes beneficiaries, guardians, executors, caregivers, LPA donees (the people you appoint under a Lasting Power of Attorney to make decisions if you lose mental capacity), deputies, emergency contacts, and professional contacts like your insurance agent, financial advisor, and lawyer. Here's what makes it different from a contact list: it gets built automatically. As you work through your planning with YEPPA — Immortalize's built-in digital concierge — you answer questions about your life and wishes. The people you mention get added to Connections as you go. By the time your plan is complete, you have a full, organised picture of everyone involved, without sitting down to fill it in separately. The question most people then have is: why does having this written down actually matter? The answer is more uncomfortable than most people expect. Why "They'll Figure It Out" Is Not a Plan Most people assume the people around them have a rough sense of who handles what. In practice, that assumption falls apart the moment something actually happens. If you were hospitalised tomorrow, could your family answer these questions without spending hours on the phone? Who has authority to make medical decisions on your behalf? Who can access your bank accounts? Who is your lawyer, and where are your documents? Who should be notified first and what do they actually need to do? If the answer to any of those is "they'd figure it out," that's not a plan. That's a blind hope. The gap between assuming people know and actually recording it is exactly where families lose time, money, and peace of mind. What makes Connections useful isn't just that it stores this information. It's the structure it puts around it, specifically who is responsible for what, and who gets to see what. What Does Connections Actually Cover? Connections isn't just about who handles things. It covers every kind of role in your plan, including who benefits. People who act on your behalf. Executors who manage your estate. LPA donees who handle your personal welfare or property and affairs. Guardians for your children or dependents. People who provide care. Caregivers for yourself, an elderly parent, a special needs dependent, or even a pet. People who need to be reached. Your contact when hospitalised. Your contact when critically ill. Professional contacts. Your insurance agent, financial advisor, wealth manager, and lawyer. The people your executor or donee will need to reach when making claims or managing your affairs. Beneficiaries. Who inherits from you, and in what capacity. Every person who plays any part in your plan has a place in Connections. But recording who they are is only half of it. The other half is deciding what each of them gets to see. How Does Access Control Work in Connections? Not everyone in your Connections needs to see everything. You decide what each person can access. Some people get a full view of your plan. Others get read-only access to specific parts. Some are simply recorded, noted as relevant without being given access at all. This matters because different roles need different information. Your executor needs to know about your assets and professional contacts. Your caregiver needs to know about your medical preferences. Your beneficiaries may not need to know anything until the time comes. Connections lets you set those boundaries clearly, so the right people have what they need and nothing more. And for the people most likely to be managing all of this, the ones caught between two generations at once, that clarity is especially valuable. Who Is Most at Risk of Getting This Wrong? If you're in your 40s or 50s, you're probably managing pressure from two directions at once. Your parents are ageing. Your own life is complex. You're the person most likely to be called when something goes wrong with a parent — and the person whose family would be most affected if something went wrong with you. You've probably already seen what happens when a family isn't prepared. You know the phone calls, the confusion, the decisions made under pressure with incomplete information. The good news is that you're also the person most able to do something about it, not just for your parents, but for yourself. And the effort required is far smaller than most people assume. How Does Connections Get Built? This is the part most people find surprising: you don't need to sit down and fill Connections in from scratch. As you work through YEPPA's guided planning flow, you answer questions about your life — who you'd want making decisions, who your beneficiaries are, who should be called in a crisis. The people you name get added to Connections automatically, with their roles already noted. By the time you've worked through your plan, your Connections are largely done. If you'd rather start manually, you can add people directly at any time. Name, contact details, role, access level. Either way, Connections becomes a living record that reflects your plan as it stands today, not as it was years ago when you last thought about it. Action Steps Start your planning with YEPPA. Your Connections will take shape naturally as you go — no separate setup needed. If you prefer to start manually, add your key contacts first. Your executor, your emergency contacts, your lawyer, your insurance agent. Get the most important people in before filling in the rest. Set access levels deliberately. Think about who actually needs to see what and be specific. Access is easy to grant and easy to update. Review it when life changes. New relationship, new dependent, change in circumstances. Your Connections should reflect where you are now. Tell the people who matter. If someone has a role in your plan, let them know. A person who doesn't know can't act on it when the time comes. Emma eventually sat down and worked through her own plan on Immortalize. Not because she expected anything to happen. But because she'd seen what three days without a plan looked like, and she didn't want that for her brother, or her own children. Getting your people recorded isn't about preparing for the worst. It's about making sure the people who love you aren't left guessing when it matters most. Frequently Asked Questions Q: Does adding someone to Connections give them any legal authority? A: No. Connections is a personal record of roles and access. It doesn't confer legal authority. Legal authority comes from documents like a Lasting Power of Attorney or a will. Connections helps the right people know what you'd want and who to contact, but formal legal steps need to be taken separately with a qualified professional. Q: What is a Lasting Power of Attorney and how does it relate to Connections? A: An LPA is a legal document that appoints someone — called a donee — to make decisions on your behalf if you lose mental capacity. In Singapore, it is registered with the Office of the Public Guardian. Connections lets you record your LPA donee as part of your plan and give them access to the information that they will need. Q: Do I need to fill in Connections manually? A: Not necessarily. As you work through your planning with YEPPA, the people you mention get added to Connections automatically. You can also add people directly at any time. Q: Who should I add to Connections? A: Anyone who plays a role in your life or your plan. That includes family members, professional contacts like your lawyer and insurance agent, caregivers, executors, and beneficiaries. If someone would need to act on your behalf, be reached in an emergency, or benefit from your estate, they belong in Connections. Q: What is the difference between read access and read and edit access in Connections? A: Read access lets someone view relevant parts of your plan. Read and edit access lets them update information too. The right level depends on the person's role — someone managing your affairs actively needs more access than someone who simply needs visibility. Q: How often should I update my Connections? A: Review it whenever something significant changes — a new relationship, a death, a divorce, a new dependent, or a change in professional contacts. As a general rule, once a year is a reasonable minimum. This article is intended for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, tax, or estate planning advice. Laws and regulations vary by country and individual circumstances differ. Please consult a qualified legal or financial professional for advice specific to your situation.
- What Is a Trust? A Beginner's Guide to How Trusts Work
Trusts are one of the most powerful tools in estate planning. Yet many people find them confusing or assume they are only for the ultra-wealthy. In reality, trusts serve a wide range of purposes: protecting assets, providing for dependants, ensuring your wishes are carried out efficiently, and in many cases avoiding probate (the legal process of administering a deceased person's estate through the courts). Most guides explain trusts by listing types - a living trust, a discretionary trust, an offshore trust, and so on. The problem with this approach is that these labels often overlap, and the same trust can go by different names depending on who is describing it. A more useful way to understand trusts is through their features. Every trust is built from a set of defining features, and understanding each feature helps you understand what a trust can and cannot do, and how different trusts are structured to serve different purposes. A trust you encounter in the real world is simply a combination of these features, tailored to the settlor's specific goals. NOTE: The rules governing trusts vary significantly across jurisdictions, including how trusts are taxed, enforced, and treated under probate and asset protection laws. The principles discussed here are general in nature and may not apply identically in every jurisdiction. What Is a Trust and How Does It Work? A trust is a legal arrangement where one person (the settlor) transfers ownership of assets to another person or entity (the trustee) to hold and manage on behalf of one or more intended recipients (the beneficiaries). The assets placed into the trust are generally no longer owned by the settlor. Instead, legal ownership is held by the trustee, who manages the assets according to the rules set out in a legal document called the trust deed for the benefit of the beneficiaries or stated purpose of the trust. The trustee is bound by a fiduciary duty (a legal obligation to act honestly, in good faith, and solely in the interests of the beneficiaries). A trustee who breaches this duty can potentially be held personally liable for any resulting loss. Trusts are commonly used in estate planning to: Control how and when assets are distributed to beneficiaries; Protect assets from creditors or legal claims; Provide for dependants, including minor children or family members with special needs; Avoid or minimise the probate process; Maintain privacy over the distribution of an estate. A trust can hold almost any type of asset such as property, cash, investments, shares, insurance policies, and more. What Are the Key Features That Define How a Trust Works? Rather than categorising trusts into rigid types, it is more helpful to understand the key features that define how any trust is structured and how it operates. Every trust is a combination of these features, chosen to match the settlor's intentions and circumstances. The eight features below are some common ones you will encounter. But depending on the jurisdiction and the complexity of the arrangement, a trust may be shaped by additional features beyond what is covered here. 1. When Does a Trust Take Effect - Living vs Testamentary? A trust either comes into existence during the settlor's lifetime or upon their death. This single feature shapes everything about when and how the trust operates. A living trust is created and activated while the settlor is alive. Assets are transferred into the trust immediately, and it begins operating straight away. This is the most common structure for estate planning because it allows the settlor to see the trust in action, make adjustments over time if it is revocable, and ensure a smoother transfer of assets on death without going through probate. A testamentary trust is written into a Will and only comes into existence when the settlor dies and the Will is executed through probate. It does not exist as a legal structure during the settlor's lifetime. While it does go through probate, it is a useful tool for settlors who want to control how assets are managed for beneficiaries after death, particularly for minor children or staged distributions. 2. Can a Trust Be Changed After It Is Created - Revocable vs Irrevocable? Whether a trust can be changed after it is set up is one of the most consequential decisions a settlor makes, as it directly affects control, asset protection, and how the trust interacts with the estate. A revocable trust can be amended, modified, or dissolved by the settlor at any time during their lifetime. The settlor retains full control, which also means the assets can still be considered part of their estate for legal purposes and can remain accessible to creditors. Once established, an irrevocable trust is generally difficult or cannot be changed unilaterally by the settlor, although modification may still be possible depending on the trust deed and applicable law. When assets are transferred in, they are no longer legally owned by the settlor. This provides stronger asset protection, can potentially remove assets from the taxable estate, and may shield them from personal creditors. 3. How Are Distributions Decided - Discretionary vs Fixed? This feature determines how much control the trustee has over distributing assets to beneficiaries, and how much certainty the beneficiaries themselves can expect. In a discretionary trust, the trustee has full discretion over how, when, and how much to distribute to beneficiaries. No beneficiary has a guaranteed entitlement. The trustee exercises judgment based on each beneficiary's needs and circumstances, often guided by a letter of wishes (a non-binding document written by the settlor to guide the trustee on how they would like assets managed and distributed). A trust deed tells your trustee what they are legally required to do. But it cannot capture the nuance of your intentions - why you made certain decisions, how you want your trustee to interpret grey areas, or what you hope for your beneficiaries beyond the legal terms. That is what a Letter of Wishes is for. In a fixed trust, each beneficiary's entitlement is predetermined and specified in the trust deed. The trustee has no discretion. They must distribute exactly as instructed. This structure is simpler and more transparent, and is typically used when the settlor has a clear and certain intention about how assets should be divided. 4. Does the Trust Hold Assets Now or Later - Funded vs Standby / Unfunded? This feature determines when assets actually enter the trust and has significant practical implications for how the trust is managed during the settlor's lifetime. A funded trust holds assets from the moment it is created. The settlor transfers assets — cash, property, investments, or other holdings — into the trust at the time of establishment, and the trust immediately begins managing them. A standby or unfunded trust is legally established but holds no or minimal assets until a specific trigger event occurs, such as the settlor's death or a diagnosis of incapacity. A common example is an insurance trust, where the trust deed is put in place during the settlor's lifetime but the insurance payout only flows into the trust upon death. The advantage is that the structure is ready to receive assets exactly when needed, without requiring an immediate transfer. Whether your trust is funded today or designed to activate later, your executor (the person responsible for carrying out your estate plan after you pass) needs to know it exists — where the deed is held, who the trustee is, and what to do when the time comes. 5. Who Is the Trust Created For - Beneficiary-Based vs Purpose-Based? Most trusts exist to benefit specific people. But not all of them do, and understanding this distinction helps clarify the full range of what a trust can accomplish. Most trusts are created for the benefit of named individuals — children, a spouse, other family members, or specific persons the settlor wishes to provide for. These are beneficiary-based trusts, and the trustee's role is to manage and distribute assets in the interests of those individuals. Some trusts, however, are established not for individuals but for a specific purpose. A charitable trust is created to advance a cause — such as education, poverty relief, or community benefit — and is typically subject to regulatory oversight. A purpose trust is established for a non-charitable but specific objective, such as maintaining a family property, holding shares in a family business, or funding an ongoing project. In both cases, there are no named individual beneficiaries — the trust exists to fulfil its stated purpose. Your beneficiaries, trustee, co-trustees (where two or more trustees are appointed to manage the trust jointly), and protector (an optional oversight role with powers such as removing or appointing trustees) are some of the most important people in your estate plan. Keeping their details organised and making sure they know their role is just as important as the trust deed itself. 6. Where Is the Trust Established - Onshore vs Offshore? A trust is governed by the law of the jurisdiction in which it is established, and this choice has meaningful implications for how the trust is regulated, taxed, and enforced. An onshore trust is established under domestic law — the law of the country where the settlor lives or where the assets are held. It is subject to local regulations, courts, and tax rules. An offshore trust is established in a foreign jurisdiction — common locations such as the British Virgin Islands, Cayman Islands, Jersey, Guernsey, or Labuan — and is governed by the laws of that jurisdiction. Offshore trusts are typically used by individuals with cross-border assets, international family members, or complex multi-jurisdictional estates. They may offer advantages in terms of asset protection, privacy, and in some cases tax planning, but they carry additional complexity, cost, and compliance obligations. 7. Who Manages the Trust - Individual Trustee vs Corporate Trustee? The choice of trustee is one of the most consequential decisions in setting up a trust, as the trustee holds legal ownership of the assets and is responsible for managing them according to the trust deed. An individual trustee is a person — typically a family member, close friend, or trusted adviser. Individual trustees are common in straightforward family trusts. They tend to have personal knowledge of the settlor's wishes and the beneficiaries' circumstances, but they may lack professional expertise, and their ability to act can be affected by their own death, incapacity, or personal circumstances. It is also common to name a replacement or successor trustee (someone designated to step in if the original trustee is unable to continue) to ensure the trust keeps operating without interruption. A corporate trustee is a licensed professional trust company. Corporate trustees bring expertise, continuity, regulatory oversight, and institutional accountability. They are not subject to the personal risks that affect individual trustees and are often preferred for larger or more complex trusts, long-term structures, or where impartiality is important. The trade-off is cost — corporate trustees charge professional fees for their services. Many trusts appoint both: an individual trustee for personal knowledge and connection, and a corporate trustee for professional oversight and continuity. 8. How Long Does a Trust Last - Fixed Term vs Perpetual? The duration of a trust shapes how long the trustee's obligations last and when beneficiaries ultimately receive full control of the assets. A fixed term trust has a specified end date or vesting condition (the point at which a beneficiary becomes entitled to receive their share of the assets). For example, when the youngest child reaches the age of 30, or after a defined period of 20 years. Once the term ends or the condition is met, the trust winds up and assets are distributed. A perpetual trust is intended to continue for an extended or indefinite period of time. For example, to hold a family business across generations or to sustain a charitable purpose in perpetuity. Is a Trust Part of Your Estate Plan? Understanding how trusts work is an important first step — but knowing whether you need one, and what kind, depends on your personal circumstances, your assets, and your goals for the people you are planning for. A trust is just one piece of an estate plan. Alongside it, most people also need a Will, a Lasting Power of Attorney, clear records of their assets, and a way to communicate their wishes to the people who will carry them out. Frequently Asked Questions About Trusts Q: Do I need to be wealthy to set up a trust? A: No. While trusts are often associated with large estates, they are used by people across a wide range of financial situations. A trust can be valuable for anyone who wants to control how their assets are distributed, provide for a dependant with special needs, or ensure a smooth transfer of assets without probate. Q: What is the difference between a Will and a trust? A: A Will comes into effect only after death and goes through probate before assets are distributed. A trust — particularly a living trust — can operate during the settlor's lifetime and generally allows assets in the trust to bypass probate entirely, resulting in a faster and more private transfer to beneficiaries. Q: Can one trust have more than one trustee? A: Yes. A trust can have co-trustees who manage the assets jointly, and it is common to also name a replacement or successor trustee to step in if the original trustee is unable to continue. Some trusts appoint both an individual and a corporate trustee to combine personal knowledge with professional oversight. Q: Can a trust be changed after it is set up? A: It depends on whether the trust is revocable or irrevocable. A revocable trust can be amended or dissolved by the settlor at any time during their lifetime. An irrevocable trust generally cannot be changed without the consent of the beneficiaries. Q: Does a trust avoid probate? A: A properly structured living trust generally allows assets held within it to bypass probate, as those assets are generally held by the trustee under the trust structure rather than in the deceased individual's personal name. A testamentary trust, however, is created through a Will and does go through probate before it is activated. This article is intended for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, or tax advice. Please consult a qualified professional for advice specific to your circumstances.
- Emre Legal Becomes First Law Firm to Adopt Digital Concierge YEPPA, Making Legacy Planning Smarter & More Affordable
We’re proud to welcome Emre Legal LLC, a boutique Singapore firm specialising in estate planning, family law, and mental capacity matters, as the first law firm to embrace elderhood planning powered by YEPPA, Immortalize’s digital concierge, making it easier, smarter and more affordable for clients to get their legacy planning done without compromising quality of legal advice. The Pain Point When planning for death and mental incapacity, most clients don’t know where to start, what they should be thinking about or how they should be deciding. They worry about missing something crucial, yet lawyers can’t spend hours walking through every possibility while keeping fees affordable. The Bridge By adopting YEPPA, Emre Legal gives legacy planning clients a head start. Before even stepping into the lawyer’s office, clients can run through guided questions and contextual options tailored to their circumstances. This helps them discover what they need to consider, learn organically what matters, and organize their thoughts ahead of time. When clients sit down with Emre Legal, the conversation is no longer about “where do I start?” but instead about clarifying priorities, resolving ambiguities, and finalising decisions. The Result? Meetings that are more productive, value-added and cost-effective - without compromising the quality of legal advice. With YEPPA, Emre Legal is raising the bar of legacy and elderhood planning by law firms. Smart Tech. Human Touch. Legal Advice Redefined. Try YEPPA at Emre Legal’s Elderhood Planning Portal now!
- FinGroup Adopts YEPPA, Leads the Way in Holistic Elderhood Planning
We’re proud to welcome FinGroup, a one-stop consultancy for healthcare professionals and business owners, as the first to launch its own Elderhood Planning Portal, powered by Immortalize, a platform that transforms elderhood planning from a maze of confusion into a seamless journey. FinGroup isn’t just managing wealth. They’re delivering truly holistic life planning and elevating the client experience with a tech-enabled approach to retirement, care, and legacy - from thoughtful planning through to confident execution. "As a former doctor and now business owner, I’ve lived the trade-offs and understand the pain points. When you’re on call or running a business, you don’t have time for fragmented planning," Chow U-Jin, Founder of FinGroup, says. "YEPPA connects the dots while our advisors bring the judgment to turn clarity into action." By harnessing YEPPA, Immortalize’s elderhood planning digital concierge, FinGroup is raising the bar for what it means to support clients through life’s most important transitions - with empathy, foresight, and the technology that makes it effortless. Smart tech. Human touch. Advisory redefined. That’s FinGroup with YEPPA. Doctors, healthcare professionals and business owners: It’s time to take the confusion out of planning for your elderhood. Try YEPPA at FinGroup’s Elderhood Planning Portal now!
- Demystifying Advance Care Planning (Singapore Edition)
Advance Care Planning (ACP) is an important part of preparing for one's Last Mile of Life. But what exactly is it, how much does it cost and what's the difference between ACP, Lasting Power of Attorney, Advance Medical Directive and other Last Mile of Life-related documents? In this article, we explain the differences and give you a big picture overview of why ACP is important and how to get it done. What is Advance Care Planning? Advance Care Planning (ACP) is the process of planning for your future healthcare options. It is non-legally binding and completely voluntarily. The objective of an ACP is to allow you to have a say in your healthcare when you no longer have mental capacity. In essence, ACP consists of having a conversation with your family and doctors on your goals, values and beliefs, to help them understand your preference towards future healthcare treatments. Your preferences will be documented and stored on the National Electronic Healthcare Record. For example, if you are severely mentally impaired with a low chance of recovery, your individual goals and values may influence decisions regarding comfort care (types of medication given to keep you comfortable) or life-sustaining care (types of treatment to keep you alive). In the event that you are unable to make decisions for yourself, your ACP will guide your representative, also known as your Nominated Healthcare Spokesperson (NHS), on how to act in your best interest. Who is Advance Care Planning for? While ACP can be done by anyone at anytime, regardless of age or healthcare conditions, ACP can be particularly important if you are frail, have a chronic illness, an early cognitive impairment, or are approaching the end of life. Why is Advance Care Planning important? Planning for your future healthcare options gives you the opportunity to have a say in what you want done to yourself and gives your loved ones better clarity on how to decide for you in the event that you are unable to express your own wishes. Who should I choose as my Nominated Healthcare Spokesperson (NHS)? Your NHS could be your spouse, friend, or even a relative. The person should ideally be: At least 21 year-old; Someone who knows you well; Willing to speak up for your goals and values on your behalf; Someone you trust and will act in your best interests to tell your doctors about the care you would like to receive should you lose mental capacity; and Someone who can handle stressful situations well. You can appoint up to two NHS. If you do appoint two NHS, make sure that they both agree on your preferences. What's the difference between ACP and LPA? The key difference between Lasting Power of Attorney (LPA), Advance Care Planning (ACP) and other last mile of life planning-related documents such as Advance Medical Directive (AMD) and Will is the function of the documents and whether the document is legally binding. In the following section, we explain the differences. LPA vs ACP Lasting Power of Attorney (LPA) allows you to give legally binding rights to one or more persons (called donee) to make decisions for you if you lose mental capacity. The key focus here is on assigning official powers and LPA generally doesn't tell your representative what specific decisions to make with that power. Related article: Demystifying Lasting Power of Attorney (Singapore Edition) While you can include your healthcare preferences in your LPA, anything specific will need to be drafted by a lawyer, who may not be the best person to give medical advice, and it can be costly. This is where ACP comes in. ACP helps you communicate your wishes to your loved one, who may also be your LPA donee, about the healthcare decisions you would like to make if you lose mental capacity. The key here is about communicating your preferences and the ACP document is not legally binding. *NOTE: If you are considering or have already made an LPA, you should include your donee in your ACP discussions to ensure that your donee is aware of your wishes. AMD & Will An Advance Medical Directive (AMD) tells the doctor that you do not want extraordinary life-sustaining treatments used to prolong your life in the event that you become terminally ill and unconscious. You can think of it as a legally binding document that transfers the power to decide whether to put you on extraordinary life-sustaining treatments to the doctors. The key here is that the doctors get to decide and even if your family, LPA donee or nominated healthcare spokesperson objects, the doctors are legally obligated to respect your wishes. Related article: Demystifying Advance Medical Directive (Singapore Edition) LPA, ACP and AMD takes effect when you are alive and can't decide for yourself. Will, on the other hand, is a legally binding document that takes care of your affairs after you pass away. Related article: What is a Will and how to get it done? (Singapore Edition) Where do I go to get my ACP done? For those who are generally healthy, you can consider completing your ACP online using myACP on MyLegacy@LifeSG. This service allows you to prepare your ACP by yourself without speaking to an ACP facilitator. If you are frail, have a chronic illness, early cognitive impairment, or are approaching the end of life, you may prefer doing your ACP at certain government hospitals, polyclinics, clinics and social care providers. Which provider is more suitable for you depends on your circumstances. For example, if you are a patient at the hospital or polyclinic, you may ask your doctor for a referral. For a list of ACP providers, click here. How much does it cost to do an ACP? How much it costs depends on factors such as the type of provider, whether you have a decision or require frequent consultations, etc. For example, going to a clinic with three sessions to draft up the documentation can cost ~$300. For a list of ACP providers on Immortalize marketplace and their estimated cost, check here. Need help on getting your ACP, LPA, AMD or Will done? Speak to the Immortalize Customer Service Team and we'll explain what you need to do, how much it costs to get them done and which provider is most suitable for you. What should I do to get started on my ACP? Step 1. Decide how you want to prepare your Advance Care Plan (ACP) (a) If you’re healthy and just want to get something done quickly, you can use myACP — an online service on MyLegacy@LifeSG that lets you complete your ACP independently, anytime, anywhere, without having to speak to an ACP facilitator. (See AIC FAQs: https://www.aic.sg/care-services/faqs-on-acp/) Before you jump straight into myACP, we recommend starting with our Letter of Wishes (LOW) Generator. It guides you through a holistic set of questions on care preferences, mental incapacity, and death-related matters, while also considering how these choices link to financial and legal aspects. You’ll get suggested answers for the open-ended parts of your ACP, which you can copy and paste directly into myACP. By doing the LOW first, you’re not just preparing for your ACP — you’re also creating instructions relevant for your Will, Lasting Power of Attorney (LPA), and other legacy planning documents. This approach avoids answering ACP questions in isolation, making the process smarter, easier, and more connected. (b) If you are frail, have a chronic illness, early cognitive impairment, or are approaching the end of life, you may prefer working with a provider for the human touch and professional guidance for more detailed planning. For a list of ACP providers on Immortalize marketplace and to compare their services, click here. Step 2. Start with the LOW Generator, then complete your ACP Use the LOW Generator to clarify your preferences and generate answers that can be reused for your ACP. (a) For those who are generally healthy and are considering doing your ACP online, open myACP on MyLegacy@LifeSG and follow the steps to complete your ACP, pasting in your prepared answers where relevant. Once your Nominated Healthcare Spokesperson (NHS) accepts their appointment, your ACP will be officially registered. (b) If you are frail, have a chronic illness, early cognitive impairment, or are approaching the end of life, you may prefer professional guidance or have more complex needs. Compare ACP providers here. What should I do after I make an ACP? You should take care to review and revise your plans periodically to ensure that they are up-to-date with your current wishes. As long as you have mental capacity, you can contact your ACP provider to make any changes. It is recommended that you share any updates with your loved ones, healthcare team, and any other persons you deem relevant. Check out more guides on the Resource page > Immortalize is Singapore's most comprehensive elderhood marketplace and information provider. Find out all you need to know about ageing better, retiring more meaningfully and leaving a legacy that is uniquely yours here and let us help you get these sorted easily. Outsource the work and start planning for you and your family's legacy with Immortalize Prime, your personal elderhood planning assistant! Disclaimer: Nothing in this article or site should be construed as providing legal advice, financial advice or advice of any sort. The information provided are general in nature and may become inaccurate over time. Please consult a professional for advice. For any issues or queries, please contact j@immortalize.io.
- Singapore Just Digitised Advance Care Plan. Filling It Is Easy. Knowing What to Say Is Hard. Here’s How to Make It Simple.
The Singapore Government recently launched a digital Advance Care Planning (ACP) tool on MyLegacy - a major step forward in helping individuals express their healthcare preferences for the future. This is especially important if, one day, you're unable to speak or make decisions for yourself due to serious illness or cognitive decline. Much like the earlier rollout of the digital Lasting Power of Attorney (LPA), this ACP tool is part of a national effort to encourage Singaporeans to plan ahead and ensure their wishes are known. Yet even with this progress, many people still find themselves asking: What exactly should I include in my ACP? What matters most to me? How do I even begin to think about this? That’s where deeper, more holistic planning becomes essential. The Tool Is Easy to Use - Deciding What to Say Isn’t The new digital ACP tool simplifies the submission process - but deciding what to include is still difficult. It’s not just about completing a form. It’s about making thoughtful choices that reflect your values and future wishes. Many people feel uncertain about where to begin, what to include, or how to discuss these issues with loved ones. That’s why guidance matters. ACP Is Just One Part of a Bigger Planning Picture ACP decisions rarely stand alone. They are deeply connected to other areas of your life such as estate planning, caregiving responsibilities, asset distribution, insurance coverage, and legacy intentions. When you start thinking through your care preferences, related questions naturally arise: How should your loved ones make medical and financial decisions for you if you're unconscious or mentally incapacitated? What will happen to your children, ageing parents, or pets if you're suddenly unable to care for them? These choices shape how your care preferences are interpreted and respected. To make your ACP truly meaningful, it must be part of a broader life and legacy plan. Stuck on What to Say? YEPPA and the LOW Generator Make It Easy to Start We know the hardest part isn't submitting the form - it's figuring out what to say. That’s why we created YEPPA, your personal assistant for elderhood planning, along with the Letter of Wishes (LOW) Generator. Rather than leaving you with a blank page, YEPPA guides you through bite-sized questions with suggested responses based on real-life scenarios, common preferences, and best practices. You can choose a suggested response, customise it, or write your own - giving you a clear starting point with the flexibility to reflect your personal values. The LOW Generator helps you: Clarify your care and end-of-life preferences Record wishes for dependents, pets, or special needs Reflect on your legacy, values, and critical decisions Organize your assets and share what matters most Build a plan where your ACP, Will, LPA, and other documents are in sync You can keep your answers private, share them with loved ones, or copy and paste relevant sections directly into your government ACP form. (Try creating your Letter of Wishes with a 7-day free trial here.) You Don’t Need All the Answers. You Just Need a Place to Start. Planning for the future can feel overwhelming. But it doesn’t have to be. You don’t need to have it all figured out. You just need the right prompts and a thoughtful space to explore your options. Here's how to take the next step: Explore how YEPPA helps you plan smarter for the future here. Try the Letter of Wishes Generator (Paid feature with a 7-day free trial) here. Join our free webinar "Living to 100 Is the New Norm – Here’s How to Plan Smarter, Age Better" here Immortalize – Transforming Your Elderhood Planning from a Maze of Confusion into a Seamless Journey.
- Singapore Just Launched Digital Advance Care Plan. Here’s How Wealth Managers Can Monetize It.
The Singapore Government recently rolled out a digital Advance Care Planning (ACP) tool on MyLegacy - a well-timed initiative aimed at helping individuals document their healthcare preferences before they lose mental capacity. Much like the push for digital Lasting Power of Attorney (LPA) in recent years, this rollout is expected to be followed by government-led awareness campaigns to encourage proactive care planning. The government’s ACP initiative is a significant and major step forward, removing a key barrier to getting started. But another challenge remains: knowing what to think about - and how to decide. The Tool Is Now Digital. The Thinking Still Isn’t. Digitizing ACP makes form submission easier. But it doesn’t make decision-making easier. Most people struggle with questions like: What kind of care would I want if I am seriously ill? Who should make decisions on my behalf? What are my personal beliefs about dignity, suffering, and end-of-life priorities? These decisions are rarely made in isolation. They intersect with estate plans, dependent support, asset distribution, insurance coverage, and legacy values - all of which affect a client’s care planning choices. Planning Gap = Advisor’s Opportunity This is a crucial opportunity for wealth managers. Helping clients think holistically about elderhood, care preferences, and end-of-life planning doesn’t just deepen trust, it also helps you: Uncover financial blind spots Align solutions with real-life scenarios Position the right products at the right time When clients start thinking beyond just their finances, they often uncover gaps - in protection, liquidity, caregiving costs, and legacy planning - that advisors can help address. Whether it’s funding long-term care, adjusting portfolio allocations, or protecting multi-generational wealth, these planning conversations lead directly to revenue-generating opportunities. The Government Tool Isn't Designed for Advisors The government’s digital Advance Care Planning tool is made for citizens - not for wealth managers. It doesn’t allow advisors to manage, view, reuse, or support client plans in a structured way. It’s a one-time, client-only form. There’s no workflow, no engagement loop, and no link to financial strategy. That’s where YEPPA, your elderhood planning personal assistant, and its Letter of Wishes (LOW) Generator comes in. YEPPA & the LOW Generator: A Smarter, Scalable Planning Engine Unlike the standalone ACP tool, YEPPA is built for advisory use - to help financial professionals guide clients through comprehensive elderhood and legacy planning. With the LOW Generator, you can: Guide clients through structured, bite-sized questions that cover ACP, LPA, Will, Advance Medical Directive (AMD), caregiving, dependent and pet care, and values-based planning Auto-generate planning documents that surface personal priorities, expose financial gaps, and support product recommendations Share downloadable sections with lawyers, doctors, and family decision-makers Deepen long-term relationships by engaging not just the client, but their entire family network This is how you shift from transaction-based advice to life-stage planning and unlock more meaningful, monetizable conversations. Monetize the Momentum with YEPPA Business & Enterprise YEPPA is designed to fit seamlessly into your practice: Use YEPPA Business to manage multiple client plans, deliver structured guidance, and earn affiliate revenue when clients continue independently Launch your own YEPPA Enterprise platform to offer white-labeled experiences, reduce client acquisition cost, and expand your service footprint - all while retaining client data and brand value (Check out YEPPA for Wealth Managers here.) Whether you want to bundle it with insurance, integrate into retirement plans, or offer it as part of a premium advisory tier, YEPPA is built to help you grow. Take the Next Step If you’re ready to turn ACP awareness into actual business value, here’s how to get started: Learn more about YEPPA for Wealth Managers here. Try the Letter of Wishes Generator (Paid feature with 7-day free trial) here. Reach out to us at j@immortalize.io to discuss how to use YEPPA Business and YEPPA Enterprise for your business; or Join our upcoming webinar - Living to 100 Is the New Norm: Here’s How to Plan Smarter, Age Better here. Immortalize – Your partner in unlocking opportunities in the Longevity Economy.
- Giving Your Children An Equal Inheritance in Australia May Lead to Litigation
Dividing your assets equally among your children after your passing may be contested in Australia. Depending on the needs of the individuals, “adequate provision” in Australia’s family provision law may require an unequal distribution of your inheritance to ensure the needs of certain family members are addressed, according to Max Williams, Special Counsel at de Groots Wills and Estate Lawyers. We spoke to Max about Australia’s family provision law, why it’s one of the most common forms of estate litigation and the key matters foreigners with Australian assets and Australians overseas should consider when completing their estate planning. Name: Max Williams Company: de Groots Wills & Estate Lawyers Wills and Estate Specialisation: Estate planning, estate litigation based on Family Provision law Operating Locations: Australia – New South Wales, Victoria and Queensland Service Style: Efficient, proactive, communicative Q: Can you tell us about yourself? How did you get into law and estate planning? Max: I excelled in high school, and my family wanted me to pursue a challenging field like medicine. However, I wasn't interested, so we agreed on a double degree in law and communications. Initially, I didn't care much for law, but as I neared the end of my studies and got practical experience, I saw a future in it. I began my career as a lawyer at a small firm on the Gold Coast. There, I gained diverse experience in areas like criminal, family, and conveyancing law. Later, I joined a bigger firm as a property and commercial lawyer. During that period, the lawyer in charge of wills and estates had recently left. Despite others not being interested, I stepped up as a junior lawyer to handle the wills and estates portfolio. This is where I discovered that I had a genuine passion for this field. To enhance my knowledge and skills, I pursued a Master's degree majoring in wills and estates law. After graduating, I then became an Accredited Specialist with the New South Wales Law Society, which only about 5% of Australian lawyers have achieved. Eventually, I transitioned to de Groots, a firm specializing in wills and estates law. This aligns perfectly with my interests, and I'm currently in my fourth year here, thoroughly enjoying my work. Q: The wills and estates industry isn't commonly considered exciting, what drew your interest to this field? Max: To me, this area holds significant appeal for a couple of reasons. Firstly, it's a universally relevant field of law since everyone will eventually pass away. One may never encounter family law or property law because one may never get a divorce or purchase a property. But wills and estates law touches everyone's lives, either through their own passing or the passing of someone they know. The skills and knowledge that I possess can genuinely benefit everyone. Secondly, I appreciate working with regular people rather than businesses or commercial entities. My clients are families and people with loved ones to care for. What I do helps them ensure their family's future and provides them with a sense of security, especially since many people avoid thinking about mortality. Facing one's own mortality is a natural hesitation. When people engage in estate planning, they are forced to confront this reality, but being able to offer them concrete plans and documents to ease their worries brings me a deep sense of satisfaction. Q: What does being an accredited specialist mean in Australia and how can someone become accredited? How is a lawyer with this specialization different from one without it? Max: Specialist Accreditation is a recognition granted by fellow legal professionals in a particular field of legal specialization. The process is quite demanding. You need to have worked as a lawyer for at least five years, predominantly focusing on the area of law in which you are seeking to be accredited. There are three evaluations: a written assessment, a written exam, and a face-to-face interview. At the end of the process, experienced specialists in that field will review and decide if you meet the high standards. Q: What is the price difference between a specialist in wills and estates law compared to a general legal practitioner in Australia? Max: The cost varies depending on the type of work. For estate litigation, it's typically billed per hour. A specialist might charge between AU$500 and AU$800, which is higher than a general lawyer. However, when it comes to estate planning, firms usually charge on a fixed fee basis. The distinction lies in the value and services provided by specialist firms compared to general firms. Specialist firms can offer a wider range of strategies and options. For instance, we can incorporate special approaches for handling discretionary family trusts, something a general practice firm may not delve into. Many of our clients have these trusts because they are becoming more and more common. These family trusts are set up while you're alive and are separate legal entities. Having a watertight will for your other assets doesn't usually cover what happens with your trust-held assets. It's a common misconception that a will encompasses assets held in a trust. General firms can also create excellent wills, but the loose end of what happens to the trust assets might remain untied. As a specialist firm, we have various strategies to help tie up these loose ends, ensuring that the trust assets end up where you intend them to go. Simply put, you are not necessarily paying more to a specialist firm for the same work, but you are paying more because you’re getting more value, options, and strategies throughout the process. Q: What services do you provide in the wills and estate space? Max: We cover three main areas in our firm: estate planning, estate administration, and estate litigation. While I'm involved in both estate planning and estate litigation, my focus leans towards estate planning. In this role, I utilize tools like wills, enduring powers of attorney (EPA), appointments of enduring guardian, trusts, and binding death benefit nominations for superannuation. [Enduring Power of Attorney (EPA) is a legal document that allows you to appoint a person or organization to have the legal power to make legal, financial and/or property decisions on your behalf when you lose mental capacity. An Appointment of Enduring Guardian allows you to appoint someone to make lifestyle and health decisions for you if you lose mental capacity. Both the EPA and appointment of enduring guardianship are akin to Singapore's Lasting Power of Attorney (LPA). However, these documents differ across Australian states due to varying state laws and rules. Superannuation is a retirement savings system in Australia, where your employer adds money to your super account while you work, and it's meant to support you financially during your retirement.] Superannuation is a big subject in Australia. A binding death benefit nomination allows you to choose who will receive your superannuation when you pass away, which is often part of estate planning. Like trusts, superannuation isn't necessarily governed by your will. A binding death benefit nomination is similar to a will but requires a specific form to be used. We also have unique strategies in place that can try to minimize tax around superannuation where it's self-managed. When we meet clients in person, we can explain these unique strategies in depth for their situation. I'm also a lecturer at The College of Law Australia, where I teach about Family Provision, which is also where most of my litigation work revolves around. It is an aspect of estate litigation in Australia, where certain persons challenge wills on the basis that the deceased person did not adequately provide for them. Own assets in Australia and want to know how to estate plan for them? Book an appointment with Max from de Groots now Q: Can you tell us more about the Family Provision law in Australia and why it’s important to consider that in estate planning? Max: Family Provision Law in Australia is a law that ensures that the estate of a deceased individual provides sufficient support to their family members. People can go to court if they think they didn't inherit enough from an estate to meet their needs. It's a misconception that anyone can contest a will due to inadequate provision; that's not the case. These court applications, called Family Provision applications, have different rules depending on which Australian State we are talking about. Each State’s jurisdiction has specific criteria for those eligible to file a Family Provision application. Typically, this includes spouses, children and dependents, but the exact list varies in each jurisdiction. For instance, stepchildren don't have the automatic right to make a Family Provision application in New South Wales, but they are allowed in Queensland. Another misconception is that it's always fair to divide a parent's estate equally among all their children (or unfair to divide the estate unequally). The law states that each person's situation must be individually evaluated. If parents specify in their will that they're dividing everything equally, one child could challenge this if they feel they haven't been provided for adequately. While claims can come from various family members and relatives, most often we find it's adult children who make such claims. Q: In Singapore, mental incapacity is probably the more common reason to challenge a will. Why is it more common to use family provision laws to challenge a will in Australia? Max: Compared to challenging a will based on mental incapacity, which requires medical and other professional evidence, making a Family Provision application is much simpler and the evidence is laxer. You mainly need to show your financial situation, which is simpler to demonstrate. Going to trial can be expensive; legal costs for both sides can exceed AU$100,000, and certainly for smaller estates it’s not going to be feasible, so settlements often happen during the compulsory mediation rather than via a full trial. On the other hand, as mentioned, proving mental incapacity or undue influence can be tough. Suspicion of unreasonable actions isn't enough; solid evidence is needed, and it's uncertain how such cases will end. Still, it's becoming common to see both contested probate and Family Provision causes of action running together nowadays. Q: Do you offer a basic estate plan package and how much does it cost? Max: Our basic package covers a simple will (appointing executors and naming a few beneficiaries), along with an EPA and appointment of enduring guardian. The cost starts at AU$1,800 for individuals and AU$3,000 for couples. Prices vary based on each client's unique situation. Even if two clients receive the same documents, they may be charged differently. Factors like urgency or complex wealth can influence pricing due to additional care and risk assessment needed. Q: What are a few typical challenges that your clients encounter? Max: Many people don't realize that a will doesn't cover assets not owned in their personal name, like trusts, companies or superannuation. Online wills are increasingly popular, but they are not usually going to be able to deal with these types of assets. This is why it's crucial to consult a specialist. They can help you develop strategies to manage these assets properly, structure the will to fully provide for beneficiaries, considering aspects like asset protection and tax savings, and offer tailored advice based on individual circumstances. A growing trend in Australia is the rise of blended families, where a couple can not only have children that they have together, but also children from their previous relationships. The challenge is ensuring provisions for a spouse while also providing for children from a previous relationship. Engaging a specialist in this case is particularly useful in helping you find a solution that balances the interests between the various family members. Q: What type of trusts are common in Australia? Why and when do people use such a trust? Max: Testamentary trusts are quite common nowadays, and many clients have probably heard of them, even if they don’t fully understand them. When we talk about a testamentary trust, we mean a testamentary discretionary trust, which is set up in your will, usually adding a few extra pages to it. [A testamentary trust is established under a will and and takes effect only upon the settlor's passing.] For these trusts, having sufficient wealth is key. The trust would typically need to receive at least half a million dollars or more for it to be relevant. People opt for testamentary trusts to safeguard beneficiaries, even though they don't personally benefit from the trust. For instance, if a beneficiary goes through a divorce, the assets won't usually be at risk of going to their ex-spouse. However, merely having money doesn't mean it's suitable for everyone. Some clients can afford it but don't see its value, so they opt not to use it. Additionally, there needs to be a sufficient number of beneficiaries, often family members. These trusts are often set up for adult children as primary beneficiaries, then their own children, and so on. However, if you have only one child without children of their own, the trust's utility might be limited. It's more effective when there will be multiple beneficiaries through generations. Sometimes, it's not just about wealth or number of beneficiaries, but about the beneficiary's circumstances. This applies when a parent is making a will for a child with special needs, like mental disabilities, addiction, etc. In such cases, the trust protects the inheritance from the beneficiary themselves, as they might not be able to manage the money well. Q: How much does including a testamentary trust cost? Max: Including up to three testamentary trusts in our basic package, which includes a will, EPA and appointment of enduring guardian, would raise the starting cost from AU$1,800 for individuals to AU$4,000, and AU$3,000 for couples to AU$7,000. Through our related company, de Groots Guardian Services, we can serve as trustees for testamentary trusts, especially for beneficiaries with disabilities. We don't usually charge a commission (percentage of assets), unlike some trust companies. Instead, we bill based on the work required, as some trusts might have substantial wealth but need little management, while others might have less wealth but more involved work. Curious about whether you should include a trust in your estate plan for your Australian assets? Book an appointment with Max from de Groots now Q: What should foreigners with Australian assets and Australians living overseas keep in mind when planning for their estates? Max: If you're a foreigner with assets in Australia, the first crucial step is ensuring the validity of your will. Ensure Your Will is Valid In Other Jurisdictions While you might have a valid will in your home country, the criteria for a valid will vary between jurisdictions. Our general advice is that you should always have a will in each jurisdiction that you own assets in, so if you own assets in Australia, it's advisable to create a will here. Additionally, there might be specific regulations and factors that are relevant here but not in another country. As specialists, we will help you highlight these matters to you. Because Australia is part of the Commonwealth, we have resealing laws. If someone passes away with a will probated in a Commonwealth country, we can reseal it in Australia, providing an automatic advantage. However, if the will was created in countries like China or the United States, we can't reseal it. In those cases, you would need to meet Australia's will validity requirements. Location of Assets For Australians living abroad, there could be tax ramifications, primarily related to income tax and where you earn your income. However, from a succession perspective, the focus is on asset ownership. If you've moved abroad and taken your wealth with you to another country, it's usually less concerning. Yet, if you're working in another country while retaining assets in Australia, proper estate planning, like using wills, remains important. Another important consideration is that if you choose to create a will for each country where you have assets in, ensure that the wills from different countries do not nullify or invalidate each other. If you don't have a will but own assets in Australia and other countries, your domicile (the country you consider as your permanent place) may become crucial. This becomes significant for tax purposes and estate litigation, particularly when determining which jurisdiction’s Family Provision law is applicable. Q: What are some of the upcoming trends in the wills and estates area in Australia? Max: I'm drawn to this area of law because it remains relatively stable. Unlike some fields that experience yearly changes, wills and estates law sees fewer modifications. In New South Wales, our most significant change recently has been transitioning all probate applications online, marking the largest shift in about 15 years. Occasionally, you might hear whispers about the government considering reintroducing estate tax, especially near election times. Unlike many countries, Australia currently doesn't have estate tax, meaning you don't need to give a portion of your estate to the government. While we do keep an eye on potential tax changes, we don't let tax considerations dominate our approach. Our main focus is ensuring the rightful individuals receive your wealth. Q: Anything interesting about you? Max: I've been a huge fan of Batman since I can remember. Over time, I've gathered a substantial collection, with many items gifted by my family, friends, and colleagues who know about my Batman fandom. This fascination stems from a few reasons. Firstly, I grew up with Michael Keaton playing Batman in Tim Burton's blockbuster films. That was before the avalanche of superhero films nowadays, so as the main superhero on the big screen at the time, Batman was a big part of my childhood. Secondly, I'm drawn to Batman's human side; he lacks superpowers but uses his tragic past (the death of his parents) to make a positive impact on the world rather than turning into a supervillain. This interview has been edited for length. Do you have overseas assets and need help on estate planning? Back to profile interviews > All articles and resources > FAQs What is Family Provision Law in Australia? Family Provision Law in Australia is a law that is designed to ensure that the assets of a deceased individual provides adequate support to their family members. Am I eligible to file a Family Provision Application? In Australia, the rules for Family Provision applications vary by state, with each state having its own specific criteria for eligibility to file such applications. Speak to Max Williams from de Groots here to inquire more. If I have a Lasting Power of Attorney (LPA) in Singapore, do I need an Enduring Power of Attorney (EPA) in Australia? While Singapore's LPA is similar to Australia's EPA, LPAs are generally not recognized in other countries and vice versa. However, please consult a professional on whether this is the case and decide if you need an LPA (or one that's equivalent) for your specific country outside of Singapore. Immortalize is an Elderhood marketplace and information provider. We make planning and executing your plans for ageing, retirement, legacy and everything elderhood-related simple, easy and comprehensive! Immortalize Who's Who series seeks to profile service providers in the legacy planning space to help you better identify and relate to the best, the most outstanding and the legitimate providers. Find a professional, compare prices, and kickstart your estate planning Disclaimer: Nothing in this article or site should be construed as providing legal advice or advice of any sort. The information provided are general in nature and may become inaccurate over time. Please consult a professional for advice. For any issues or queries, please contact j@immortalize.io







