Contact Information
Popular Book From CCH Explains
Living Trusts, Urges Use Of Professional Advisors
(RIVERWOODS, ILL., July 6, 1999) A
living trust can be a powerful estate planning device,
but individuals should thoroughly understand what they
can and cannot do and what pitfalls must be avoided
before they set one up, according to
CCH INCORPORATED, a leading provider of tax and
business law information. To help people understand what
a living trust is and how they can work with a
professional advisor to create one that will meet their
needs, CCH has published the third edition of its popular
What You Should Know About Living Trusts, a
32-page booklet for individuals and for financial
planning professionals who wish to educate their clients.
A living trust is simply a way of dividing the legal
rights to property among various people including
the current owners. The most common concern is to keep
the present rights to the property while giving the
future, after-death rights to the owners
beneficiaries.
What You Should Know About Living Trusts walks
the reader through the process of setting up a living
trust and clearly spells out their advantages. For
example, by transferring wealth in this way, owners of
property avoid probate. While the expenses of probate are
significant, the booklet points out that the delays of
probate may be even more burdensome when the object is to
transfer a business to ones beneficiaries.
Additional concepts such as privacy protections,
expeditious asset distribution, reduction of legal
challenges, simplified disposition of decedent property
in multiple states, protection for the incapacitated and
creditor protection are all helpfully discussed in
non-technical language that non-professionals can readily
grasp. As might be expected from the publisher of
authoritative materials for tax professionals, the CCH
booklet points out subtle tax advantages that can be
gained from elections available to living trusts as well
as two potential tax drawbacks.
Professional Advice a Must
CCH noted that today people can create a living trust
or think theyve created a living trust
by filling in the blanks on a form or clicking a
box on the Internet. But What You Should Know About
Living Trusts points out that living trusts have
potential pitfalls, and that professional advisors with a
knowledge of state inheritance, trust and tax law play a
crucial role in setting up living trusts that truly meet
their clients needs.
Many people lose the benefit of their living trust,
for example, by failing to transfer property to the trust
in the first place, forgetting to put new property into
the trust, mixing trust and non-trust assets or by being
lax about titles, deeds and other ownership records.
What You Should Know About Living Trusts also
lists more than a dozen questions to be considered before
setting up a trust questions that conscientious
professional advisors will work through with their
clients.
Availability and Pricing
For more information, or to order What You Should
Know About Living Trusts, call CCH at 1-800-248-3248
or click here. Single copy price is $7.00.
Significant quantity discounts are available for
professionals who wish to distribute copies to their
clients and prospects.
About CCH INCORPORATED
CCH INCORPORATED, headquartered in Riverwoods, Ill.,
was founded in 1913 and has served four generations of
business professionals and their clients. The company
produces more than 700 electronic and print products for
the tax, legal, securities, human resources, health care
and small business markets. CCH is a wholly owned
subsidiary of Wolters Kluwer U.S. The CCH web site can be
accessed at www.cch.com.
-- ### --
EDITORS NOTE: An editorial review copy of What
You Should Know About Living Trusts is
available by contacting Leslie Bonacum at 847-267-7153 or
bonacuml@cch.com.
nb-99-70
|