What is the average cost of an estate plan in Michigan?
In Michigan, the legal drafting cost for an estate plan can vary widely. A basic will package may cost a few hundred dollars, while trust-based or tax-sensitive plans can run several thousand. Barking Sands Capital does not replace an estate attorney; our role is to coordinate tax, retirement, insurance, and investment strategy so your attorney’s documents support your broader financial goals.
Is it better to have a will or trust in Michigan?
A will and a trust serve different purposes in Michigan. A will directs asset distribution through probate, while a properly funded trust may help families manage privacy, continuity, and probate avoidance. The better option depends on your assets, beneficiaries, taxes, and family goals. We help evaluate the financial implications and coordinate with legal professionals when trust planning is appropriate.
How does tax-efficient estate planning reduce taxes?
Tax-efficient estate planning looks at how assets may transfer, how retirement accounts are taxed, and whether strategies such as Roth conversions, charitable giving, insurance planning, or beneficiary updates could reduce future tax friction. The goal is not only to pass wealth on, but to help beneficiaries receive it in a more coordinated, flexible, and tax-aware way.
Do you work with estate attorneys and tax professionals?
Yes. Barking Sands Capital’s InteProcess™ is built to coordinate designated professionals across legal, insurance, tax, retirement, and financial planning. We can help clarify your financial objectives, review asset structures, identify tax considerations, and collaborate with your estate attorney or tax professional so each piece of your plan works together.
Can estate planning help small business owners?
Business owners often need estate planning that addresses succession, liquidity, tax exposure, and retirement income. We help evaluate strategies such as cash-balance plans, owner tax planning, insurance protection, and coordinated investment management. For Southfield and Metro Detroit business owners, this can be especially valuable when personal wealth and business value are closely connected.
Should Roth conversions be part of my estate plan?
Roth IRA conversions can be useful when they reduce future required distributions, create tax-free growth potential, or provide heirs with more flexible inherited retirement assets. They are not automatically right for everyone. We analyze income, tax brackets, retirement timing, Medicare considerations, and legacy goals before recommending a conversion strategy.
What documents should I review before estate planning?
We typically review beneficiary designations, retirement accounts, taxable investments, insurance policies, business interests, cash flow needs, existing wills or trusts, and tax planning opportunities. We do not draft legal documents, but we help identify financial gaps and coordination issues so your estate attorney can align documents with your full financial picture.
How often should I update my estate plan?
A plan should be reviewed after major life events such as marriage, divorce, new grandchildren, business changes, inheritance, retirement, or a move between states. Even without major changes, many families benefit from a review every few years to confirm beneficiary designations, tax strategies, insurance coverage, and investment allocations remain aligned.