Watch Your Language: Tangible Personal Property
Domicile – the place a person calls “home” – can have a significant impact on Medicaid eligibility and what benefits are available to help with long-term care.
Domicile – the place a person calls “home” – can have a significant impact on Medicaid eligibility and what benefits are available to help with long-term care.
Domicile – the place a person calls “home” – can have a significant impact on Medicaid eligibility and what benefits are available to help with long-term care.
Domicile – the place a person calls “home” – can have a significant impact on Medicaid eligibility and what benefits are available to help with long-term care.
Often defined by the age of the clients, Elder Law is unlike virtually every other practice area. Across the country, the term “elder law” is
Domicile – the place a person calls “home” – can have a significant impact on Medicaid eligibility and what benefits are available to help with long-term care.
QUOTE Effective long-term care planning can require gifting assets to a spouse or child. In Medicaid cases, assets must be transferred to the community spouse
If you choose not to decide, you still have made a choice (“Freewill” by Rush). Estate planning is based on a single choice: will you
You can’t have your cake and eat it, too.
The beneficiary is what it sounds like: the person who receives the benefit from a trust. [Read More]
Loyal. Impartial. Reasonable. Careful. That’s what it means to be a Trustee.
A trustee has legal title to assets subject to certain conditions and requirements that are spelled out in the trust document. [Read More]
The grantor is the person who creates a trust. No matter what type of trust you have, the grantor is always in charge because they set the trust’s terms. [Read More]
The trustee manages trust assets, but the grantor is the person who’s really in charge.