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NAEPC Journal of Estate & Tax Planning

Issue 43 - December, 2023

Regular Columns and Reports

  • Editor-in-Chief Note
  • Remembering Hart Axley, the “Heart” of the National Association of Estate Planners & Councils

Features

  • Five Lessons from Recent Pre-Sale Planning Cases
  • Avoiding the Pitfalls: Practical Tips for Today’s Collectors
  • Improving the Tax-Inefficiencies of GRATs with PPLI
  • Do we know the impacts of Living Wills & the POLST Paradigm on the Health & Life Insurance Sectors
  • Money Market Funds – What the Future Holds and Is My Money Secure?
  • A Guide to Admitting a Will to Probate for the Purpose of Validating the Exercise of a Power of Appointment
  • Charitable Giving from a Business Interest
  • “Messing” with Mom’s Estate – A Lawyer’s Guide
  • Basic Estate Planning Documents: Overview and Planning Considerations

News Nook: A Compendium of Current Affairs

  • NAEPC Monthly Technical Newsletter

 

Read the complete issue.

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Member Benefits

Members of NAEPC and affiliated local councils can take advantage of discounts on benefits, programs and services through our member benefit providers.  Visit the "Member Benefits" page of this website to learn more.


61st Annual NAEPC 
Advanced Estate Planning Strategies Conference
with Post-Conference Sessions for Council Leaders (EPC board members welcome)

October 20 - 24, 2024 - Anaheim, California
Disneyland Hotel

The conference features nationally-recognized speakers on advanced topics of interest to allied professionals and provides opportunities for attendees to cultivate multi-disciplinary relationships while collaborating on cutting edge ideas and trends. The conference educational sessions are for every member of every estate planning council and all estate planning professionals.  

Learn more about the Annual NAEPC Advanced Estate Planning Strategies Conference


Accredited Estate Planner® Designation 

How can you gain a "leg-up" on your competition in your estate planning practice? Obtain the Accredited Estate Planner® (AEP®) designation. Professional estate planners can achieve a nationally-recognized, graduate level accreditation that acknowledges their experience and specialization in estate planning. Awarded by the National Association of Estate Planners & Councils to estate planning professionals who meet strict requirements of education, experience, knowledge, professional reputation, and character, the AEP® designation helps both clients and colleagues understand your belief in, and dedication to, the team concept of estate planning.  

The designation is available to credentialed professionals actively licensed or certified as an accountant; attorney; insurance and financial planner; philanthropic advisor; or trust officer – holding one or more of the following credentials CAP®, CFA, CFP®,ChFC®, CLU®, CPA, CPWA®, CSPG, CTFA, JD, MSFS, and MST– who are devoting at least a third of one’s professional time to estate planning. Eligible applicants must meet stringent qualifications at the time of application and commit to ongoing continuing education and recertification requirements.

Join the growing group of professionals who recognize the value of holding the premier estate planning professional designation.  Become an Accredited Estate Planner® designee. > Learn More


Estate Planning Law Specialist Certification 

The Estate Planning Law Specialist (EPLS) certification is available to attorneys and is administered by the Estate Law Specialist Board, Inc., an attorney-run subsidiary of the National Association of Estate Planners & Councils. Attorneys who become board-certified under this program demonstrate a high level of professionalism and commitment to the concept of specialization. This program is currently the only program, other than certain state bar association programs which are only for residents of their particular states, accredited by the American Bar Association to Board-certify attorneys as Estate Planning Law Specialists. Many states permit lawyers to hold themselves out as specialists if their certification is awarded by an ABA-accredited program. Each lawyer, however, must consult the rules in his or her own state to determine how such a certification can be presented to the public. > Learn more