Montefusco Estate Planning
Call now
Call now
Website
Call
Montefusco Estate Planning
Montefusco Estate Planning offers a variety of services for your estate planning needs. We can help you by drafting a will, advance directive, living will, durable power of attorney or trust. We offer flat-fee pricing on most of our legal document preparation. The price we quote you for a legal document is how much you will pay. None of the. Fill out your contact information and interests, and we'll get back to you as soon as possible.

If you'd prefer, you can email Attorney Peter Montefusco directly at peter@montefuscoestateplanning.com or call us at the number at the top of the page. What happens if I die without a will in Maryland? If you die without a will, you die "intestate" and default rules, called intestacy laws, decide who will inherit your property. Maryland's intestacy laws are decided by the Maryland legislature as a "one-size-fits-all" approach to inheritance.

They do not reflect your personal preferences or circumstances. Maryland's intestacy laws in particular.
Services
Montefusco Estate Planning, LLC is a law firm exclusively focused on estate planning legal matters including wills, advance directives, powers of attorney, trusts, guardianships and probate administration.
By focusing on estate planning, we are able to provide the expertise and experience for every type of client.
As a solo law firm, you can be safe in knowing that the attorney you meet with at your initial discussion will be the same person who will be drafting your documents, not some paralegal you've never met.
Montefusco Estate Planning offers a variety of services for your estate planning needs.
We can help you by drafting a will, advance directive, living will, durable power of attorney or trust.
We offer flat-fee pricing on most of our legal document preparation.
The price we quote you for a legal document is how much you will pay.
None of the surprises or uncertainty of hourly billing.
We offer flat-fee pricing for simple wills, advance directives, living wills, medical powers of attorney and durable powers of attorney.
The words "estate planning" may evoke images of iron gates and a dusty mansion.
In reality, estate planning is a set of a few simple steps that every adult should take.
These steps ensure that your wishes, and not the government's or someone else's, are followed in the case of your death or incapacity.
It includes deciding where your property goes when you die, deciding who will take care of your minor children and making sure your health care is handled the way you want it to be.
Estate planning is for everyone, not just for the ultra-rich or the elderly.
A will is a signed, written statement that serves several important functions.
The most obvious function is controlling how your property will be distributed at your death.
Certain property does not pass via will: property held in joint tenancy (most couples hold their home this way), property in a trust, life insurance payable to a beneficiary, retirement plans payable to a beneficiary, and pay-on-death accounts all are transferred at your death regardless of what your will says.
If you die without a will, your property will be distributed according to default rules called intestacy laws.
An advance directive is a general term for a document that explains how you want medical decisions to be handled in the future.
An advance directive may be a living will, a health-care power of attorney, or it may be a single document that contains both a living will and a health-care power of attorney as parts.
Both a living will and a health-care power of attorney are critically important in making sure medical decisions are treated the way them to be in the event you can't speak for yourself.
Reviews
Review Montefusco Estate Planning

Be the first to review Montefusco Estate Planning.

Write a Review