Why Small Business Owners Need an Estate Plan

Why Small Business Owners Need an Estate Plan

Running a small business can keep you busy, but it should not keep you from creating an estate plan. Not having a plan in place can cause problems for your business and your family after you are gone.

While an estate plan is important for everyone, it is especially important for small business owners. Planning allows you to dictate what will happen with your business after you die or are no longer able to manage it. It can help you avoid excess taxes and debts and facilitate your business’s continued success.

Goals of a Small Business Estate Plan

Before sitting down to start the estate planning process, you should think about your goals for the business. What do you want to have happen if you die or become incapacitated? Should the business continue with current partners or be sold to new owners? Should your family take over? Should the business be shut down? Consider your family dynamics when thinking about these questions. Once you have come up with your goals, you can create a plan to meet them.

woman business owner at work shipping orders

The basic building blocks of any estate plan include a will, power of attorney, and medical directives. The will allows you to direct who will receive your property at your death while the power of attorney and medical directives dictate who can act in your place for financial and health care purposes.

Business Estate Plan Topics

Following are 4 topics a business owner should consider as part of an estate plan.

(1) Tax Planning

If your business is not a separate entity, you may want to consider ways to minimize estate taxes. The current federal estate tax exemption ($12.06 million in 2022) is so high that most estates do not pay any estate tax. However, a small business could put an estate over the limit. Also, the fact that the estate tax exemption is set to be cut in half in 2026 and that states have their own estate taxes means that tax planning is important. In Massachusetts, the state estate tax exemption in 2022 is $1,000,000. As a business owner, you may want to put your business assets into a trust or a separate business entity like a limited liability company to lower your estate tax burden.

(2) Trusts

A trust can be useful not only to reduce estate taxes, but also to ensure the continued running of your business if you die or become incapacitated. Because a trust passes outside of probate, the assets in the trust can be transferred immediately to the person you want to run the business without waiting for the whole estate to go through probate. In addition, if you become incapacitated, the trustee can continue to run your business without court involvement.

(3) Buy-Sell Agreements

If you own your business with others, a buy-sell agreement can be very useful. Buy-sell agreements are used if one of the owners dies, leaves the company, or becomes incapacitated. It specifies who can buy an owner’s share of the business, under what conditions, and for what price.

(4) Life Insurance

When you own a business, life insurance takes on new importantance. A life insurance policy can ensure that your family continues to receive an income in the event of your death. It can also provide funds to keep the business running and be used to fund a buy-sell agreement.

Your estate planning attorney can help you come up with a plan to meet the needs of your business.

Small Business Estate Planning at Baker Law Group

If you are a business owner seeking an estate plan to protect your business and/or family, we would appreciate the opportunity to speak with you.  Baker Law Group assists business with succession business planning. Our attorneys have considerable corporate, financial, and estate planning experience and can identify tax and asset protection strategies that work best for you.

To schedule a consultation:

Complete Online Form or

781-996-5656 phone or

mailto:info@MBakerLaw.com email

Related Posts