Estate planning is the one topic that almost every client acknowledges they need to address and yet almost no one prioritizes until something forces their hand. It could be a health scare, an unexpected passing, or a divorce. By the time those moments arrive, decisions that should have been made thoughtfully are suddenly being made under pressure, often by people who are grieving and have no roadmap to follow.
That is exactly what a good estate plan is designed to prevent.
The most important shift I make with clients is reframing what estate planning actually is. It is not a morbid exercise. Rather, it is one of the most empowering things you can do for yourself and your family. A well-constructed plan puts you in control of what happens to your assets and your healthcare. Without one, those decisions default to the state, to the courts, and become part of a process that has nothing to do with your wishes or the people you care most about. Part of what we do at Bogart Wealth is help clients understand what is actually at stake before they ever sit down with an attorney, so the importance of getting this right does not come as a surprise later.
I have seen firsthand how a document that has not been reviewed in a decade can create real hardship for a family at an already difficult time. Whether it is a power of attorney that was never executed, leaving a spouse with no legal authority to act, or a trust that was created but never properly funded, these situations can happen, and are more common than most people realize. Importantly, though, they are entirely avoidable. The hardest part of those conversations is knowing that a relatively simple step, taken earlier, would have changed everything.
When I sit down with clients to work through their estate plan, the conversation goes much deeper than reviewing paperwork. We talk about what they actually want and who they trust to carry out their wishes. Some of the most overlooked questions are around incapacity rather than death. Determining who makes decisions for you if you are unable to make them yourself or who manages your finances if something happens unexpectedly are questions worth answering long before they become urgent. We help clients think through these decisions in a structured way, so that when the time comes to formalize everything with an attorney, they walk in with clarity rather than uncertainty.
After working with hundreds of households, a few patterns stand out. Beneficiary designations are consistently the most overlooked piece of an estate plan. Retirement accounts and life insurance pass directly to whoever is named on the form, regardless of what a will says. An outdated form can completely derail an otherwise sound plan. Reviewing and updating these designations is something we do with clients on an ongoing basis, because it is easy for them to fall out of step with the rest of the plan as life changes.
It is also worth understanding that having a will is not the same as having a complete plan. A will tells people where assets go. A trust gives you control over how and when they get there, and it keeps your estate out of probate, which can be a slow and costly process. For clients with property in multiple states or specific wishes around how wealth passes to the next generation, a trust is a necessity. Families with more complex dynamics, whether that means a blended family, a child with special needs, or a closely held business, getting the structure right matters enormously. These are situations where having an advisor who understands your full financial picture makes a real difference. Advisors are often the ones identifying where the estate plan and the broader financial plan are not aligned, and helping clients understand what needs to change.
Perhaps the most common misconception I encounter is that estate planning is something you do once and set aside. The plan you put in place at 45 may need meaningful revision by 60, or even earlier. Treating documents as permanent once they are signed is where a lot of well-intentioned plans start to break down. At Bogart Wealth, staying connected to clients over time means we catch these gaps before they become problems. When something significant changes in a client’s life, revisiting the estate plan is part of the conversation we are already having.
There is also value in having someone help you prepare before you ever sit down with an attorney. Knowing who you want to name as your power of attorney, how you want assets distributed, and whether your current ownership structure aligns with your intentions can make that meeting far more efficient. Most people have not thought through the details, and as a result, important decisions get made too quickly or deferred entirely. We work through those questions with clients in advance, so the attorney can focus on drafting and advising rather than starting from scratch.
You do not need to have everything figured out before getting started. What matters most is that you begin. If estate planning has been sitting on your list, let this be the moment you move it forward. Make sure it gets done right and that it continues to serve you well over time.
