Why Do Wealthy Nebraskans Use Revocable Living Trusts If They Don't Save on Taxes?
A Nebraska revocable trust is not a tax dodge or asset-protection vault. It is a privacy, continuity, and administration tool, especially for families with real estate, business assets, blended-family issues, incapacity concerns, or potential creditor exposure.
What Happens to My Will and Estate Plan After a Divorce in Nebraska?
Divorce changes more than your relationship status. In Nebraska, a divorce may affect parts of your estate plan, but it does not automatically fix every will, trust, beneficiary designation, power of attorney, deed, retirement account, or life insurance policy. This article explains what Nebraskans should review after divorce, why beneficiary forms and court orders matter, and how thoughtful estate planning can help protect your children, property, and future decision-making.
What Can Nebraska Families Learn From the Justin and Cerina Fairfax Tragedy About Divorce, Domestic Violence, Custody, and Estate Planning?
The Fairfax tragedy is heartbreaking, but it also raises legal questions Nebraska families ask every day when divorce, custody, safety concerns, and planning for children all collide. This post explains what Nebraska courts can and cannot do when conflict escalates, including temporary orders, protection orders, custody restrictions, mediation, and why estate planning matters more than many people realize during a family crisis.
Why is divorce an estate planning event in Nebraska?
Divorce in Nebraska isn’t just a family-law issue. It’s also an estate-planning event, because it can change who inherits from you, who can manage your money if you’re incapacitated, and who is still named on beneficiary forms. Nebraska law helps in some places through its “revocation on divorce” statute, but it doesn’t rebuild your plan or update your accounts for you. That’s how people get surprised—an old will with gaps, a power of attorney that no longer works when you think it does, or a retirement account that still lists an ex. This guide explains what Nebraska law revokes automatically, what you still must update yourself, and why employer retirement plans can be different under federal ERISA rules.
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