DECEMBER 4, 2025
Protecting Your Family With a Comprehensive Estate Plan

Estate planning is one of the most important steps you can take to protect your family and see to it that your wishes are carried out after you pass. Yet many people delay creating an estate plan because they feel overwhelmed by the process or unsure about what should be included. Understanding the key components of a comprehensive estate plan helps you approach this task with confidence and clarity.
Understanding What Goes Into Your Estate Plan
When you begin creating an estate plan, the first considerations involve your assets and how you want them distributed. These fundamental questions guide the entire planning process: Do you want your assets sold and the proceeds divided? Are you interested in establishing a trust? Should your property be divided evenly among all your children, or do you prefer to give specific assets to specific children, perhaps one house to one child and another house to another child?
Your specific situation determines which approach makes the most sense for your family. These are all topics you’ll discuss with your Washington state attorney during what’s called a design meeting. At the beginning of the representation, your attorney will walk you through all the available options for your estate plan, helping you understand the implications of different choices.
During this design meeting, you’ll cover several critical areas. First, you’ll discuss what will happen to your assets after you pass. Second, you’ll address how any estate taxes will be paid. Third, you’ll determine who will have powers of attorney while you’re alive, and what happens once you die when those powers of attorney are no longer available. You’ll also discuss practical matters like bank account access, i.e., will someone else be named on your accounts, or will your family members need to go through additional steps at the bank to access those funds?
These conversations allow you to take steps that provide clarity for your family. The goal is that when you pass, your family isn’t left with complete uncertainty, unsure of what to do next or how to proceed. A well-designed estate plan gives your loved ones a clear roadmap during an already difficult time.
Don’t Overlook Your Digital Assets
One aspect of Washington state estate planning that many people overlook is their digital presence, particularly social media accounts. This is actually an important consideration in modern estate plans. Many social media platforms allow you to fill out questionnaires or designate what happens to your accounts after you pass. You might want to turn your accounts over to someone in your family, especially if you have years of photos and memories preserved on these platforms that you want your family to be able to access and preserve.
Discussing your digital assets with a Seattle attorney during your design meeting helps prevent important details from being overlooked. In today’s digital age, these accounts often hold significant sentimental value and practical importance for families wanting to preserve memories and access important information.
Understanding Key Roles: Executor, Trustee, and Beneficiary
Estate planning involves several important roles that people often confuse. Understanding the differences helps you make informed decisions about who should serve in each capacity.
An executor is the person who executes your estate plan. This individual carries significant responsibility for carrying out your wishes as outlined in your estate planning documents. The executor handles tasks like gathering assets, paying debts and taxes, and distributing property according to your directions.
A trustee serves a similar function, but specifically for a trust. For example, if you create a revocable trust and place your house into this trust, the trustee you name will manage that trust and fulfill the wishes you’ve documented in your trust agreement. Trustees have ongoing responsibilities for managing trust assets in accordance with your instructions.
A beneficiary is quite different from both executors and trustees. A beneficiary is someone who receives the benefit of your bequest. If you’ve designated that someone should receive a particular account, house, sum of money, or piece of artwork, for example, that person is a beneficiary. They’re on the receiving end of your generosity rather than managing the distribution process.
The Importance of Naming Alternatives
When creating your estate plan, your attorney will likely recommend that you name not just one trustee or one beneficiary, but also alternatives. This recommendation might seem overly cautious, but it provides crucial protection for your estate plan.
Life is unpredictable. Your named trustee might predecease you, but you might not have gone back to update your estate plan before your own death. The same could happen with a beneficiary. If you’ve named alternative people in these roles, your estate plan can still function as intended even if your primary choices are unavailable.
This seemingly simple step protects your family from a significant problem: your estate ending up in probate court. Avoiding probate is one of the primary reasons people create estate plans in the first place. Probate is a court-supervised process for distributing assets when someone dies without a valid will or when their estate plan can’t be executed as written. It’s time-consuming, expensive, and public. By naming alternative trustees and beneficiaries, you build in safeguards that keep your estate plan functioning even when circumstances change.
How Often Should You Review and Update Your Estate Plan?
Creating an estate plan isn’t a one-time task. It’s an ongoing process that should evolve as your life does. How often you need to review or update your estate plan depends on your circumstances.
Major life events always warrant an immediate review and potential update of your estate plan. If you get remarried, have another child, experience the death of someone named in your plan, go through a divorce, acquire significant new assets, or experience any other major life change, you should update your estate plan to reflect your new circumstances.
Family dynamics shift, laws change, financial situations transform, and your own priorities may evolve. So, even if you don’t experience major life events, you should review your estate plan at least once every three years. It only takes a few minutes to schedule a conversation with your attorney so you and they can review whether the provisions in your estate plan still make sense in today’s world and in your current situation.
Think of your estate planning as living, breathing documents that live alongside your life. Regular reviews allow them to continue serving your needs and protect your family effectively. What made perfect sense five or 10 years ago might not reflect your current wishes or circumstances.
Taking the First Step
If you haven’t yet created an estate plan, now is the time to start. If you created one years ago without reviewing or updating it, schedule a call to determine whether it still serves your needs. Estate planning isn’t just for the wealthy or elderly. It’s for anyone who wants to protect their family and ensure their wishes are honored.
The estate planning team at Elise Buie Family Law can guide you through the estate planning process, helping you understand your options and create a comprehensive plan tailored to your unique situation. Whether you’re starting from scratch or updating an existing plan, professional guidance is the best way to prevent critical details from being overlooked.
If you have questions about estate planning or trusts, don’t hesitate to reach out. We’re happy to discuss your situation and help you create a plan that provides clarity and protection for your family. Contact us today or schedule a convenient time to speak.
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