PRIVACY AND SECURITY WARNING

To protect our clients, please be advised that other entities, firms, or individuals may be attempting to impersonate The Singh Law Firm in order to obtain your personal, financial, or login information through fraudulent emails, phone calls, text messages, social media posts or letters.

Please be reminded: The Singh Law Firm is exclusively an Estate Planning Law Firm. We do not represent client's in litigation matters, including involving Real Property or Landlord-Tenant matters, and we will NEVER request sensitive information - including Social Security numbers, bank account details, passwords, or credit card numbers - via email, social media, phone, or online forms.

If you receive any communication that appears to be from or about The Singh Law Firm, and seems suspicious or requests personal information, do not respond or click on any links. Instead, contact our Fremont office directly at (510) 742-9500 and ask to speak with Lou Saelee to verify the communication.

Protecting your information is our priority, and we take these threats seriously.

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Who Needs Estate Planning?

It is sometimes thought that estate planning is just something for the elderly—or, for the affluent.

Here’s the truth: If you would like to choose where your assets and properties go when you die, and to have a say in who raises your children should you die when they’re still minors, you need both a will and a trust. It is important to have both estate planning documents to ensure that your wishes are carried out, and that you avoid probate court.

Almost everyone needs estate planning—as we’ll seek to demonstrate in this post.

When is Estate Planning Needed?

You need estate planning if you’re married.

Chances are, you’ll want your spouse to inherit all of your assets after you die. This is what generally happens anyway, but you don’t want to leave that up to chance, nor to make your spouse go through a lengthy probate process to get things sorted out. A will and trust help with all of this.

You need estate planning if you have children.

Not only do you want to provide a financial legacy for your kids, but you also want to ensure they have the proper guardianship, assuming they are still minors. A will and trust help ensure that your wishes are carried out, without a convoluted probate process.

You need estate planning if you have a positive net worth.

Even if you are single and you don’t have kids, you may still have assets that will need to be divided up after your death—and a will and trust ensure that this happens smoothly, with minimal burden on your family and relatives.

Estate planning is something that almost everyone can benefit from; to learn more about establishing a will and trust, contact the team at Singh Law Firm today.