Why You Should Question the Estate Planning Expert

What happens when an estate plan is technically correct—but doesn’t quite work in real life?

In this Tuesday Triage episode, Jill shares a moment from a client meeting where one simple, common-sense question changed an entire estate plan. Through a personal story and a real client scenario, she breaks down the differences between trusts and powers of attorney, and explains why questioning the expert can lead to a plan that actually works when it matters most.

This episode is about trusting your instincts, understanding your options, and remembering that estate planning is supposed to serve real people, not just legal theory.

What You’ll Learn in This Episode

  • You’re allowed to question the expert. Asking “why does it work this way?” isn’t disrespectful; it’s often essential to creating a plan that fits your life.

  • Legally correct doesn’t always mean practically right. An estate plan can be sound on paper and still create unnecessary hurdles in a real-world crisis.

  • Trusts and powers of attorney serve different roles. A power of attorney governs assets owned in your individual name, while a revocable trust governs assets titled in the name of the trust.

  • Immediate vs. springing powers of attorney matter. An immediate power of attorney allows agents to act right away, while a springing power requires a formal incapacity determination before it takes effect.

  • Incapacity determinations can create real delays. Doctors may be reluctant to make formal capacity determinations, and court involvement can add stress, time, and cost for families.

  • Estate planning should make things easier for your people. The goal isn’t just avoiding probate or checking boxes; it’s reducing friction for the people who will step in if something happens.

  • Common sense belongs in estate planning. You don’t need legal training to notice when something doesn’t align with your goals. Your perspective matters.

Resources & Links

Episode 19: Why You Need (or Don’t Need) a Trust.  A deeper dive into when revocable trusts make sense—and when they don’t.

Episode 17: How Powers of Attorney Work, When to Use Them, and When It’s Too Late to Get One. A practical explanation of financial powers of attorney and how they function in real life.

The Death Readiness Playbook: A step-by-step system to help you organize information, understand your documents, and identify gaps before a crisis forces decisions. Learn more at deathreadiness.com/playbook

Connect with Jill:

Did you enjoy this episode? Share it with someone you care about.

Listen to the full episode here:

Previous
Previous

How Poor Estate Planning Cost a First Lady Her Home

Next
Next

Why Disinheritance Can Be the Riskiest Estate Plan