One option might be to create a revocable trust that provides flexibility for the financial needs of both your children and spouse.
Another strategy worth considering is establishing a separate marital trust to segregate funds for your spouse as opposed to leaving a common pool of assets to benefit your children and your spouse, Wagner says. A separate marital trust allows you to directly allocate funds for your spouse’s benefit. With a marital trust, you can also stipulate that remaining assets in the trust pass on to your children when your spouse dies.
If you have a taxable estate, make sure you are optimizing lifetime gifting strategies to children to move assets outside of your taxable estate, she adds.
Failure to protect against depletion of assets: A person might decide to leave assets to his or her spouse in a marital trust with the intention that the marital trust will pass to the decedent’s children after the second spouse’s death. But those assets could easily be depleted if, say, the spouse suffers a debilitating medical crisis and enters long-term care.
To avoid the possibility that your children receive little or nothing, consider a life-insurance policy, instead of a marital trust, to provide for your spouse at your death, leaving other assets to your children, Wagner says.
If you are worried there won’t be enough left over for your children, a “second-to-die” life insurance policy will provide an additional inheritance upon your spouse’s death, regardless of the status of the assets, she adds.
Failure to protect your estate from your first spouse: Even though a signed divorce decree might automatically disinherit your ex-spouse from your estate, you still need to switch the beneficiary designations on your retirement accounts and company life-insurance plans so your assets don’t inadvertently pass to your ex-spouse.
With respect to a 401(k), a surviving spouse would typically be the automatic beneficiary, unless the spouse waives that right, but this is not the case for life insurance and individual retirement accounts, where the named beneficiary would generally receive the death benefit or asset upon death, depending on state law. Likewise, if you want your children to receive retirement or life insurance funds, you need to update beneficiary designations, as appropriate, keeping in mind the need for spousal consent on a 401(k).
It’s common for people to forget to update beneficiaries on retirement accounts or life insurance policies, but this can wreak havoc in the event of divorce, says Andrew Rosen, president of Wilmington, Del.-based Diversified Lifelong Advisors, a registered investment advisor. Remember to make the necessary changes for all 401(k) plans, including those from a previous employer, he cautions.
Rosen also recommends people update their financial medical powers of attorney to reflect their new circumstances, so their ex-spouse isn’t in control of money or health-related decisions.
Source: https://www.barrons.com/articles/getting-remarried-avoid-these-4-estate-planning-pitfalls-51599915601