How
do children nudge often-reluctant parents toward making sound and fiscally
smart decisions about the future of the family home?
The family home is more than
likely the most important or valuable asset in one’s estate. So it makes sense to include plans for the
future of the home in your estate planning process. How and when should real
estate be passed through the family?
This can be a very difficult
question. Commonly, elderly parents do not want to leave the old family home.
Nevertheless, there are some important financial and legal considerations to
ensure the real estate “issue” is dealt with properly and at the right time.
The New York Times recently provided some solid guidance for adult
children (or other loved ones) in an article titled, “Mom and Dad, Let’s Talk Real Estate.” Given that the article originated in
the Big Apple, the real estate in question is in the form of apartments.
Your home may be an apartment in
the Big Apple or a farm on the prairie. The value of your home may have gone up
and up, or the value may have burst with the 2008 housing bubble. Regardless,
the wise counsel offered in the article is transferrable wherever “home” is.
Why? Because real estate
decisions are as emotional as they are financial. Parents do not want to move
from the old family home and the memories that live there. On the other hand,
their children just want what is best for them and the family home itself.
Sometimes, this means selling the family home or transferring it from one
generation to the next.
There is no one solution.
However, there are more options available if you plan now, rather than react
later.
Please
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The archive on our website contains numerous blog posts on these legal
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Reference: The New York
Times (June 28, 2013) “Mom and Dad, Let’s Talk Real Estate”