KPM

split annuity Estate Planning Terms Living Will Trust Protector LTC Expenses Incentive Trusts Gift Tax Return Family Business Succession Planning Special Needs Trust Elderly Parents In Your Estate Plan Beneficiary Designations Turn Down An Inheritance Power Of Attorney Inter Vivos Securities Laws DAPT College-Age Children Do Need An Estate Plan Estate Planning Documents Annual Gift Tax Exclusion CRT Name A Guardian Power To Remove A Trustee Living Trust Owning Assets Silent & Incentive Trusts Payable-On-Death Accounts Reduce your estate tax Executor Art Collection QTIP Trust portability Life insurance Portability Probate Original Will Estate Planning Estate Plan Estate Planning Estate Planning Asset Protection Strategies

Four Estate Planning Documents Your College-Aged Child Should Have

Does your college-aged child have a basic estate plan? In more cases than not, the answer is ‘no.’ The good news is that the summer months are the perfect time to enlist the help of an estate planning advisor to create a plan, as your child will be available to sign the documents before heading to school in the fall.

Here are the four critical estate planning documents college-bound students should have:

  1. Will: Although your child is still in their upper teens or early twenties, they aren’t too young to have a will. The will specifies the disposition of their assets and can tie up other loose ends of the estate.
  2. Health care power of attorney: With a health care power of attorney, your child appoints someone to act as their proxy or surrogate for health care decisions. Typically, a parent is designated as the attorney-in-fact for this purpose.
  3. Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) authorization: To accompany the health care power of attorney, HIPAA authorization gives health care providers the ability to share information about your child’s medical condition with you and your spouse. Absent a HIPAA authorization, making health care decisions could be more difficult.
  4. Financial power of attorney: This legal document enables you and your spouse to conduct financial activities on your child’s behalf. A ‘durable’ power of attorney, which is the most common form, continues in the event that your child becomes incapacitated.


If you and your child are ready to create a basic estate plan, please don’t hesitate to contact us. We’d be pleased to help give your family the peace of mind that comes with having an estate plan.

Related Articles

Talk with the pros

Our CPAs and advisors are a great resource if you’re ready to learn even more.