7 Financial Preparations for Death You Need to Make While Healthy
Death may be inevitable, but preparing financially now ensures your loved ones avoid chaos and financial burdens after you're gone.

Death is one of life’s certainties, yet discussing it remains uncomfortable for many. While it’s awkward to contemplate, proactive financial preparations can spare your loved ones from overwhelming stress, legal battles, and financial losses after your passing. By addressing these steps now—while you’re healthy—you gain control over your legacy and provide peace of mind for your family. This guide outlines seven essential financial preparations based on expert recommendations from financial planners and estate experts.
Procrastination is common; surveys show over 60% of adults lack a basic will or estate plan. However, the U.S. Government Accountability Office reports that improper planning leads to millions in unnecessary taxes and disputes annually. Starting today ensures your assets transfer smoothly, minimizes taxes, and honors your wishes.
1. Create or Update Your Will
A last will and testament is the cornerstone of any estate plan. It legally specifies how your assets—property, savings, investments—should be distributed after death. Without one, state intestacy laws decide, often favoring spouses or closest relatives in ways that may not align with your intentions.
Key elements to include:
- Executor appointment: Name a trusted person to manage your estate, handle debts, and distribute assets.
- Asset distribution: Detail bequests to family, friends, charities. Be specific to avoid ambiguity.
- Guardianship for minors: Designate caregivers for children under 18.
- Funeral instructions: Outline burial preferences to guide survivors.
Consult an estate attorney for complex situations like blended families or high-value estates. Online tools like LegalZoom offer affordable options for simpler cases, but review periodically—life events like marriage, divorce, or births necessitate updates. According to the American Bar Association, wills reduce probate disputes by up to 80%.
2. Designate Beneficiaries on All Accounts
Many assets bypass probate via beneficiary designations on retirement accounts (IRAs, 401(k)s), life insurance, and bank accounts (POD/TOD). These ‘payable-on-death’ or ‘transfer-on-death’ options transfer directly, speeding distribution and avoiding court.
Common oversights:
- Outdated beneficiaries (e.g., ex-spouse after divorce).
- Missing designations, forcing assets into probate.
Review annually. For example, the IRS notes that improper IRA beneficiaries can trigger unnecessary taxes under the SECURE Act. Use this table to prioritize:
| Account Type | Action Needed | Potential Risk if Ignored |
|---|---|---|
| IRAs/401(k)s | List primary + contingent | Probate delays, tax penalties |
| Life Insurance | Update post-life changes | Wrong payout to ex-spouse |
| Bank Accounts (POD) | Add for joint/solo accounts | Frozen assets during probate |
| Investment Accounts (TOD) | Specify securities transfer | Family access issues |
Financial institutions provide free forms; complete them promptly.
3. Set Up a Power of Attorney and Healthcare Directive
Advance directives protect you during incapacity, not just death. A durable power of attorney (POA) authorizes someone to manage finances if you’re unable. A healthcare proxy/living will dictates medical decisions and end-of-life care.
Why now? Incapacity affects 1 in 5 over 65, per the National Institute on Aging. Without these, courts appoint guardians, costing thousands and delaying care.
Types of POA:
- Financial POA: Handles bills, investments.
- Medical POA: Makes health choices.
- HIPAA release: Allows info sharing.
Choose reliable agents; discuss wishes openly. State-specific forms are free via sites like AARP. Revise as relationships change.
4. Understand and Plan for Your Debts
Debts don’t vanish at death but must be settled from your estate. Spouses aren’t liable for separate debts, but joint ones persist. Unsecured debts (credit cards) are forgiven if no estate remains.
Steps to mitigate:
- Inventory debts: List mortgages, loans, cards.
- Life insurance: Cover key debts like mortgages.
- Trusts: Shield assets from creditors.
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau advises consolidating or paying off high-interest debt pre-retirement. In community property states, spouses share liability—consult local laws.
5. Build an Emergency Fund and Insurance Safety Net
Your family needs liquidity for funeral costs ($7,000–$12,000 average, per NFDA), taxes, and immediate expenses. An emergency fund (3–6 months’ expenses) in accessible accounts prevents forced asset sales.
Essential insurance:
- Life insurance: Term policies for dependents.
- Long-term care: Covers incapacitation costs.
- Umbrella liability: Protects against lawsuits.
The Federal Reserve reports 40% of adults can’t cover a $400 emergency—don’t leave your family vulnerable.
6. Organize Important Documents and Accounts
Create a ‘death folder’ with:
- Will, trusts, POAs.
- Account statements, passwords (use manager like LastPass).
- Deed/title docs, tax returns (7 years).
- Insurance policies, Social Security info.
Store securely; inform executor of location. Digital tools like Everplans digitize this. The FTC recommends against email lists—use encrypted shares.
7. Consider Trusts for Complex Needs
Wills go through probate (costly, public, slow). Revocable living trusts avoid this, managing assets during life and death.
Benefits:
- Privacy: No public probate.
- Control: Staggered distributions (e.g., for minors).
- Incapacity: Seamless trustee takeover.
Irrevocable trusts reduce estate taxes (federal exemption $13.61M in 2024, per IRS). Ideal for estates over $1M or special needs heirs. Attorney fees: $1,500–$3,000.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
What happens if I die without a will?
Intestacy laws distribute assets by state rules, often prioritizing spouse/children, excluding others. Probate is lengthy and expensive.
How often should I review my estate plan?
Every 3–5 years or after major events: marriage, birth, divorce, moves.
Do I need a lawyer for a will?
Not always; simple wills can be DIY. Complex cases (businesses, large estates) require one.
Can digital assets be included in my will?
Yes, specify access. Laws vary; use digital executor services.
What about taxes after death?
Estate tax applies to large estates; step-up basis minimizes capital gains for heirs.
Final Thoughts
These seven preparations transform an awkward topic into an empowering action plan. Start small—update beneficiaries today. Professional advice tailors to your situation. Your foresight ensures loved ones grieve without financial worry.
References
- 7 Financial Preparations for Death You Need to Make While Healthy — The Penny Hoarder. 2023. https://www.thepennyhoarder.com/retirement/preparations-for-death/
- Not Sure Where to Start With Estate Planning? Here Are Some Tips — The Penny Hoarder. 2024. https://www.thepennyhoarder.com/retirement/estate-plan/
- Consumer’s Guide to Estate Planning — Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (cfpb.gov). 2023-05-15. https://www.consumerfinance.gov/consumer-tools/estate-planning/
- Planning for Incapacity — National Institute on Aging (nia.nih.gov). 2024-01-10. https://www.nia.nih.gov/health/legal-and-financial-planning-later-life/planning-incapacity
- Estate Tax — Internal Revenue Service (irs.gov). 2025-12-31. https://www.irs.gov/businesses/small-businesses-self-employed/estate-tax
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