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FAQs / Wills / Trusts / How often should my will be reviewed?

How often should my will be reviewed?

A will should be reviewed periodically after certain events have occurred: either there’s been a change of law – so you need to see an attorney on a regular basis to see if there have been any law changes – or if there’s been a financial change in your life – assets go up or down, you’ve retired, or assets have been disposed of and new assets acquired. If there’s been a change in your family, one of your children has died or a parent gave you an unexpected inheritance, this would also cause a need for review. Any of these financial or family matters that change your disposition should be reviewed.

Wills / Trusts FAQs

  • How Can I Find Out If There Was A Will?
  • Can A Will Be Changed Or Revoked?
  • Can I Specify That Certain People, Like A Brother Or Sister, Should Never Receive Any Of My Property?
  • Can Someone Quit Claim His Property To Me Instead Of Leaving It In His Will?
  • Do I Have To Be In My Home State When I Make My Will?
  • Do Living Trusts Go Through Probate?
  • Does A Trustee Of A Trust Have To Provide An Accounting?
  • Does It Really Take Less Time To Settle An Estate In Which A Revocable Trust Was Used Rather Than Just A Will?
  • Does My Will Have To Be Notarized?
  • How Do You Prove A Will?
  • How Does A Living Trust Avoid Probate?
  • How does a revocable living trust avoid probate?
  • How Long Does It Take to Settle a Trust?
  • How long is a will valid?
  • How often should my will be reviewed?
  • Is a handwritten will valid?
  • My parent died with a will and disinherited me. Can my parent do that in Florida?
  • What are self-proving wills?
  • What are trusts?
  • What benefits does a trust offer?
  • What does died testate vs intestate mean?
  • What does a will usually contain?
  • What does it mean to fund a trust?
  • What happens if we cannot find the decedent’s will?
  • How can someone see the will of a person who has died?
  • What other probate avoiding techniques are there in addition to revocable, aka living, trusts?

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      • Asset Transfer
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      • Creditor Claims
      • Designated Beneficiaries
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      • Lack of Capacity
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      • Undue Influence
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