Financial and Estate Planning
Financial Planning
All financial planners are not created equal. You
need a trusted adviser to help sort through complex
financial decisions and develop sound strategies for
a secure financial future. The Personal Financial
Specialist credential was established by the American
Society of Certified Public Accountants for CPAs who
specialize in personal financial planning and is awarded
exclusively to CPAs who have demonstrated considerable
experience and expertise in that area. As of today,
there are only 3,300 CPA/PFS credentials.
Jo Rice, partner in Rice and Vowel CPA, PLLC, has
met the requirements and is recertified every three
years to maintain her PFS designation.
You deserve the best advice when planning your financial
future. A CPA financial planner must be able to assess
your current financial situation, help you determine
your financial goals, and help you develop and monitor
a plan to attain them. You need someone you can rely
on to provide trusted, objective, and competent advice—someone
who has built a reputation on those very qualities.
Jo Rice, CPA/PFS combines a century of trusted advice
with today's cutting edge financial strategies to
help you assess your current financial situation,
define your financial needs and goals, and develop
and monitor a plan to meet your goals. Contact Jo
today for an appointment to discuss your financial
planning needs.
Estate Planning
Anyone who owns property, a home, a car, a bank account,
investments, business interests, a retirement plan
account, collectables, personal belongings, etc. -
needs an estate plan.
An estate plan allows you to direct how and to whom
your property will be distributed after your death.
If you have no estate plan at all, your property could
be distributed according to your state's intestacy
laws without regard to family needs or desires.
What exactly is Estate Planning? Estate planning is
an organizing process. A couple just starting out
might own a modest home and bank accounts in their
joint names. When children arrive, who to name as
the children's guardian and how to provide for them
and your spouse in the event of unexpected death or
incapacity become estate planning concerns. Once a
person starts to realize his or her financial goals,
asset preservation and how to avoid estate taxes become
important factors in estate planning.
Many people who carefully plan for income taxes don't
give any thought to estate taxes. They assume that
estate taxes, unlike income taxes, affect only people
with large estates. However, with so many dual income
families and the high value of real estate in many
areas of the country, people who consider themselves
of moderate means may have estates that will be subject
to federal estate tax at their deaths.
The best way to keep your estate plan up-to-date
is to review it on a regular basis. We welcome the
opportunity to help you reach your goals. Contact
us today to make an appointment to discuss your estate
planning needs.
Initial
Consultation:
If needed, we start with a free consultation
to establish the scope of your project. In this
meeting, we interview you and, if necessary, other
key staff members, to ascertain what is needed.
Often, the questions we ask prompt our clients
to take the larger view of the project, and help
them to focus and clarify. |
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