
An Estate Plan Is Necessary for the Unthinkable
Have you resolved to get your estate planning done at last or perhaps updated? Here is what you’ll need to do, and, just as importantly, what you don’t need to do.
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Have you resolved to get your estate planning done at last or perhaps updated? Here is what you’ll need to do, and, just as importantly, what you don’t need to do.
Rosemary Woodward loved Rock Island and many area nonprofits. That passion and her longtime commitment to volunteerism will live on, with a $2.1 million gift from her estate to the Rock Island Community Foundation.
Social Security provides a guaranteed source of income in retirement, but what many don’t realize is that you’re not guaranteed to keep it all.
The U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) is offering up to $2 million in Economic Injury Disaster Loans for small businesses impacted by the coronavirus, in addition to a resource page detailing eligibility and how to apply.
Now that we are well into the new year, it is a perfect time for people who have not begun the process to understand the benefits of getting a plan started.
Depending on whether you are the only beneficiary, or you are buying out other beneficiaries, you could move in, rent or sell.
Experts say that creating a plan for what happens to your estate — regardless of the size of your assets — is key for unmarried couples who want their commitment to each other protected in the event of death.
Healthcare is a major expense for seniors, so much so that recent estimates put the average cost of it at $387,644 throughout retirement for the typical 65-year-old couple retiring today. While that figure may seem astronomical, it actually doesn’t account for a related expense that many seniors will inevitably face: long-term care.
Running and owning a business is just like raising a child: Both are investments in the future and both require a lot of time, resources and effort to raise successfully.
The number of unmarried couples who live together reached 18 million in 2016, a 29% jump from 14 million in 2007. Among adults age 50 and older, the increase was 75%: About four million were cohabiting in 2016, up from 2.3 million in 2007.
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