• Home
  • Who We Are
    • Dennis P. Lee
    • About Our Firm
  • How We Help
    • Business Owners & Asset Protection
    • Estate and Gift Tax Figures
    • Family-Owned Businesses & Farms
    • Incapacity & Caregiver Support
    • IRA Inheritance Planning
    • LGBTQ Estate Planning
    • Medicaid & Elder Law Planning
      • Are You A Caregiver?
      • Coping With Alzheimer’s
      • Emergency Medicaid & Nursing Home Planning
      • Guardianship & Conservatorship
      • Hospice Care
      • Medicaid Planning
    • Minor Children & Young Adult Planning
    • Outdated Estate Planning Documents
    • Pet Planning
    • Powers of Attorney, Healthcare & Emergency Documents
    • Probate & Trust Administration
    • Remarriage & Blended Families Protection
    • SECURE Act
    • Special Needs Planning
    • Wills & Trusts
  • Events
  • Resources
    • Blog
    • Client Benefits
    • DocuBank
    • Elder Law Reports
    • Estate Planning Resources
      • Estate Planning Articles
      • Estate Planning Checkup
      • Estate Planning Definitions
      • Estate Planning Reports
      • Incapacity Planning Definitions
      • Is Your Estate Plan Outdated?
      • Top 10 Estate and Legacy Planning Techniques
    • Frequently Asked Questions
      • Estate Planning FAQ’s
      • Incapacity Planning FAQs
      • LGBTQ Estate Planning FAQs
      • Trust Administration & Probate FAQs
    • LGBTQ Resources
    • Newsletters
    • Pre Consultation Form
    • Probate & Trust Administration & Resources
      • Bereavement Resources
      • How to Know if You Need Extra Help With Your Grieving
      • Loss of a Loved One
      • The Mourner’s Bill of Rights
      • Things You Need To Do When a Loved One Passes Away With a Trust
      • Things You Need To Do When a Loved One Passes Away With a Will
      • Trust Administration & Probate Definitions
    • Special Needs Resources
  • Reviews
    • Our Reviews
    • Review Us
  • Contact

Lee Law Office

Omaha, NE Estate Planning Attorney

Attend a Free Workshop
(402) 934-4409

Things You Need To Do When a Loved One Passes Away With a Will

Lee Law Office

Upon the death of a loved one, great emotional sadness sets in as family and friends support each other during this time of loss. After finding a firm emotional foundation, it is time to address the task of administering the estate set up by the deceased.

Included below is a brief list of the actions which you or your Personal Representative and Trustee should take immediately upon death. (Many of these actions may similarly be required in the event of incapacity). This is not intended as an exhaustive or detailed explanation of all actions which should be taken. Rather, it is for use as a checklist to help the appointed representatives step in and handle as expeditiously as possible those items which demand immediate attention.

  1. Consider advising any surviving family member who is alone to telephone a friend who can share the next few hours. Shock and trauma due to the death of a relative can take unexpected forms.
  2. Notify a funeral director and clergy, and make an appointment to discuss funeral arrangements. Request several copies of decedent’s death certificate, which you’ll need for his or her employer, life insurance companies, and/or decedent’s attorney for legal procedures.
  3. Contact by phone and notify the immediate family, close friends, business colleagues and employer.
  4. Arrange for care for members of the immediate family, including appropriate child care, having people at the decedent’s house, etc.
  5. Locate the decedent’s important papers. Gather as many of the decedent’s papers as possible, and continue to do so for the next few weeks.
  6. Contact our office for a consultation or notify the attorney who will be handling the decedent’s affairs. Make an appointment immediately because a tax return may be due within nine (9) months of death. This meeting is important to review decedent’s estate planning documents and to discuss state and federal death taxes that may be payable. The attorney will also determine the extent to which it is necessary or advisable to open a probate estate. (In the event of incapacity, the attorney may suggest additional steps which should be taken for estate planning purposes, particularly if death is imminent.)
  7. Telephone decedent’s employee benefits office with the following information: name, Social Security number, date of death (or incapacity); whether the death (or incapacity) was due to accident or illness; and your name and address. The company can begin to process benefits immediately.
  8. If decedent was eligible for Medicare, notify the local program office and provide the same information as in Step # 7.
  9. Notify life, accident or disability insurers of decedent’s death or disability. Give the same information as in Step # 7, and ask what further information is needed to begin processing your claim. Ask which payment option decedent had elected, and select another option if you would so prefer. If there is no payment option, you will be paid in a lump sum.
  10. Notify the decedent’s Social Security office of the death. Claims may be expedited if a surviving family member goes in person to the nearest office to investigate making a claim for survivor’s benefits. Look for the address under U.S. Government in the phone book.
  11. If you need emergency cash before insurance claims are paid, a cash advance may be available from life insurance benefits to which you are entitled.
  12. If decedent was ever in the military service, notify the Veterans’ Administration. Surviving relatives may be eligible for death or disability benefits.
  13. Record in a small ledger all money you or the immediate family spends. These figures may be needed for tax returns.
  14. Remember that a surviving family member may be in a highly emotional state. Therefore, they should avoid entering contracts for anything, and avoid spending or lending large sums of money. For our clients, consult the section of the Portfolio entitled “Other Documents” before proceeding further.
  15. DO NOT CHANGE THE TITLE OF ANY ASSETS! This can create unnecessary problems for you. Please contact our office for a consultation before you start this process.

Lee Law Office

Address

Lee Law Office
2433 S 130th Circle Suite 300
Omaha, NE 68144

Office Hours

Monday8:30 AM - 5:00 PM
Tuesday8:30 AM - 5:00 PM
Wednesday8:30 AM - 5:00 PM
Thursday8:30 AM - 5:00 PM
Friday8:30 AM - 12:00 PM

Map

map
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
lee law logo Expertise.com lee law logo
© 2023 Lee Law Office
Attorney Advertisement

© 2023 American Academy of Estate Planning Attorneys, Inc.