Co-Ownership Planning: Does It Offer Asset Protection?
Co-Ownership Planning: Does It Offer Asset Protection?
Estate planning professionals naturally field many questions about how clients can best protect their assets. Strategies for asset protection are wide-ranging, and estate planners must work in their clients' best interests to determine which strategies should be used when. An unexpected obstacle many planners encounter is persuading old or potential clients that the asset-protection strategies they've heard from friends or read about online aren't always smart. Co-ownership planning is an excellent example of a fallacious protection strategy. What is Co-Ownership Planning?Co-ownership planning is a strategy that claims that assets which are owned by more than one person are safer than assets owned by a single party. This type of planning is sometimes employed by married couples who enter a relationship holding significant individual assets. Older individuals who are concerned about the security of their assets also tend to pursue co-ownership with one or more of their grown children. Couples or groups using this supposed method of asset protection add additional individuals as owners on a variety of assets including bank accounts, real property titles and car titles. Can Co-Ownership Planning Protect Assets?The idea behind co-ownership planning is that a creditor or other interested party won't be able to access assets because they are owned by more than one person. The theory goes that creditors or relatives won't get such assets because only one party on the account or title is liable to pay, and the other account holders can't be punished for that debt. This belief simply isn't true. A creditor may be able to attach all or part of an account or asset even if someone other than the liable party is listed on the account. Co-ownership generally offers little-to-no protection from creditors.
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About Blake Harris
Blake Harris is the Managing Attorney at Mile High Estate Planning where he assists clients with Wills and Trusts, Asset Protection, and Probate. Blake has extensive knowledge and experience helping families plan for and manage the transfer of their assets.