Free Estate Planning quiz with instant feedback. Welcome to Estate Planning Basics! This quiz covers 20 questions ranging from beginner to advanced.
Most people accumulate assets over their lifetime - bank accounts, property, vehicles, personal belongings, and investments. Without written instructions, the state decides who gets what after you die, and the result may not match your wishes at all. A will is the foundational document in estate planning because it puts you in control of that decision. It also lets you name a guardian for minor children, which is one of the most important reasons younger adults should not put off creating one. The process does not have to be complicated or expensive.
Correct - a will directs how your assets are distributed.
When someone passes away without leaving a will, they are said to have died "intestate." Each state has its own set of intestacy laws that create a default distribution plan. These laws typically prioritize spouses and children, then extend to parents, siblings, and more distant relatives. The rules are rigid and do not account for personal relationships, estrangements, or non-family members you may have wanted to include. Understanding intestacy helps explain why having a will matters, even if your situation seems simple.
Correct - without a will, state law decides asset distribution.
Estate planning is not just about what happens after you die. It also covers what happens if you become unable to manage your own affairs while you are still alive - due to illness, injury, or cognitive decline. Without proper legal documents in place, your family may need to go to court to gain the authority to pay your bills, manage your investments, or make decisions about your care. A specific legal instrument can prevent that costly and time-consuming process by designating a trusted person in advance.
Correct - a durable POA lets someone handle your affairs if you cannot.
After someone dies, their assets do not automatically transfer to heirs. There is a legal process that validates the will (if one exists), identifies and appraises assets, pays outstanding debts and taxes, and then distributes what remains to beneficiaries. This process is supervised by a court and can take months or even years depending on the complexity of the estate and whether anyone contests the will. Understanding this process helps explain why many people structure their estate plans to minimize or avoid it entirely.
Correct - probate is the court-supervised process of settling an estate.
Throughout your financial life, you are asked to name beneficiaries on many different accounts and policies: life insurance, retirement accounts, bank accounts, and investment accounts. These designations are a critical part of estate planning because they often override what your will says. If your will leaves everything to your children but your life insurance still names an ex-spouse as beneficiary, the ex-spouse gets the insurance payout. Keeping beneficiary designations current and consistent with your overall plan is one of the most important and most frequently overlooked tasks.
Correct - a beneficiary is someone designated to receive your assets.
Medical emergencies can happen at any age, and if you are unable to communicate your wishes, someone must make critical healthcare decisions on your behalf. Without a designated person, family members may disagree, or the default decision-maker under state law may not be the person you would choose. A specific legal document lets you name a trusted individual and, in many versions, outline your general preferences regarding treatment. This document works alongside a living will to ensure your medical care aligns with your values.
Correct - a healthcare proxy designates your medical decision-maker.
One of the most difficult conversations in estate planning involves end-of-life medical care. If you develop a terminal illness or suffer a catastrophic injury, do you want to be kept on life support? Do you want aggressive treatment, or comfort care only? These are deeply personal decisions, and making them in advance - while you are healthy and thinking clearly - spares your family the burden of guessing what you would want during an emotional crisis. A specific legal document captures these preferences and gives them legal weight.
Correct - a living will outlines your end-of-life care preferences.
Writing a will is only part of the equation. Someone must actually carry out those instructions after you pass - gathering assets, paying debts, filing tax returns, distributing property, and navigating probate court. This person has significant responsibilities and should be someone you trust to be organized, fair, and willing to handle what can be a complex and time-consuming process. Many people choose a family member, but you can also name a professional such as an attorney or a trust company.
Correct - the executor manages your estate according to your will.
While a will is the most basic estate planning document, it has a notable limitation: it must go through probate, which is public, can be slow, and involves court fees. A revocable living trust is a legal entity you create during your lifetime and transfer assets into. Because the trust technically owns those assets, they do not go through probate when you die - the successor trustee distributes them according to the trust instructions. You retain full control during your lifetime and can change or dissolve the trust at any time.
Correct - a living trust lets assets skip the probate process.
Probate costs are one of the practical reasons many people explore trust-based estate plans. These costs include court filing fees, executor compensation, attorney fees, appraisal fees, and accounting costs. They vary by state but commonly run between 3% and 7% of the estate value. On a moderate estate, that can add up to a significant sum that reduces what your beneficiaries ultimately receive. Running this simple calculation helps put the cost of probate avoidance strategies in perspective.
Correct - $500,000 times 0.04 equals $20,000.
Not everything you own goes through probate when you die. Certain assets have built-in transfer mechanisms that operate independently of your will. Understanding which assets bypass probate and which do not is essential for a coordinated estate plan. The distinction generally comes down to whether the asset has a named beneficiary, a joint owner with rights of survivorship, or is held in a trust. Assets without any of these features must go through probate to be transferred to heirs.
Correct - life insurance with a named beneficiary passes outside probate.
Even the most carefully planned trust-based estate can have gaps. You might acquire a new asset - a car, a bank account, an inheritance - and forget to title it in the trust's name. Without a backup plan, those assets would pass under intestacy laws or require a separate probate process. A specific type of will addresses this gap by acting as a safety net. It does not replace the trust; it works alongside it to ensure nothing falls through the cracks, though assets caught by it still pass through probate.
Correct - a pour-over will funnels remaining assets into the trust.
For parents of young children, naming a guardian may be the single most important reason to create a will. If both parents die without naming a guardian, the court decides who raises the children, and the judge may choose someone the parents would not have wanted. The decision involves considering practical factors like the potential guardian's age, health, values, financial stability, location, and willingness to serve. Many attorneys recommend discussing it with your chosen guardian before putting it in the will to make sure they are willing and prepared.
Correct - a guardian is named to care for your minor children.
An estate plan is not a one-and-done document. Life changes constantly, and your plan should keep pace. Marriage, divorce, the birth or adoption of children, a significant change in net worth, moving to a different state, the death of a named beneficiary or executor, and changes in tax laws can all make an existing plan outdated or even counterproductive. A plan that named an ex-spouse as beneficiary or an executor who has since passed away can create serious problems that are entirely avoidable with periodic reviews.
Correct - review every few years and after major life events.
Trusts come in two fundamental categories, and the distinction has major implications for control, taxes, and asset protection. One type gives you full flexibility to change, amend, or dissolve the trust during your lifetime, but the assets are still considered yours for tax and creditor purposes. The other type is far more rigid - once established, you generally give up the right to change it - but in exchange, the assets may be removed from your taxable estate and protected from creditors. The right choice depends on your priorities.
Correct - revocable means changeable; irrevocable generally means permanent.
Federal estate tax is often misunderstood. It does not apply to the full value of the estate - only to the portion that exceeds the exemption threshold. This distinction is critical because the exemption is quite large, meaning the vast majority of estates owe nothing in federal estate tax. For those that do exceed the threshold, understanding the math helps with planning. The calculation is straightforward: subtract the exemption from the total estate value, then apply the tax rate to the remainder. State estate taxes may also apply at lower thresholds.
Correct - only the amount above the exemption is taxed.
When one spouse dies and does not use their full federal estate tax exemption (because their estate was below the threshold), a valuable planning opportunity exists. Without a specific election, that unused exemption would simply disappear. But under current law, the surviving spouse can claim the unused portion, effectively doubling their exemption when they eventually pass. This can protect significantly more assets from estate tax. However, it is not automatic - a specific tax filing must be made, even if no tax is owed on the first estate.
Correct - portability lets a surviving spouse claim the unused exemption.
Life insurance is a common estate planning tool, but many people do not realize that the death benefit can be included in their taxable estate if they own the policy themselves. For individuals with larger estates, this can push the total over the exemption threshold, creating an estate tax liability on money intended for their family. An irrevocable life insurance trust solves this problem by changing who owns the policy. Since the trust - not the insured - owns the policy, the proceeds are not part of the insured's estate for tax purposes.
Correct - an ILIT removes the policy from the taxable estate.
Not everyone needs a trust to avoid probate on every asset. For investment accounts and, in many states, real estate and vehicles, a simpler tool exists. By adding a specific registration to the account, you name someone to receive the asset directly upon your death, no probate required. The designation does not give the named person any access or rights while you are alive - you retain full control. It is one of the easiest and least expensive probate avoidance tools available, though it works best for straightforward situations.
Correct - TOD designations transfer accounts directly to named beneficiaries.
Leaving money to minors or young adults raises a practical question: do you want them to receive a large sum all at once, or do you want to control how and when the money is used? A direct bequest or simple beneficiary designation delivers the funds outright, which may not be appropriate for an 18-year-old. Different estate planning tools offer different levels of control over distributions. The right choice depends on how much structure you want around the money and what specific purposes you want it to serve.
Correct - a testamentary trust lets you set conditions on distributions.