Helping you plan for later life

Are you guilty of putting your head in the sand when considering what may happen in later life?

As we live longer, the incidence of strokes, dementia and loss of mental capacity is becoming more prevalent. Hopefully you’ll live to a ripe old age without facing these issues.

Nevertheless, a few simple planning meetings with the relevant professionals, will help ensure that things go as smoothly as they can.

When it comes to seeking out legal services for the elderly, it is important to find experienced solicitors you can trust. Working with a reputable lawyer, such as a member of SFE, will ensure that you have all the legal documents in place to get you what you have planned for and that you have considered the pitfalls that may face you in later life and how to avoid them if possible.

Lasting power of attorney (LPA)

An LPA enables you to nominate people to make decisions on your behalf if you become unable to. There are two types of LPA – you may need both – the first covers your financial decisions. The second covers your health and welfare decisions.

SFE members can advise on the type of document you may need, who to choose as your attorney and safeguards to protect you from the misuse of the LPA, and draft it to suit your particular circumstances and needs.

Without an LPA, if you lose mental capacity to make decisions, you might have no control over who is making decisions for you. It could be significantly more expensive, cumbersome and time consuming for your loved ones to be legally able to make those decisions on your behalf.

Care funding

This is the domain of both a financial adviser and a lawyer. It is important to seek advice which will help you plan for various scenarios: remaining in your own home, moving into sheltered or care home accommodation.

You will have certain legal entitlements which an SFE member can advise you on including your entitlement to benefit support. This could take the form of welfare benefits, social funding, or equipment from social services and health care, funded by the NHS.

The rules are complex, but an SFE member will be able to provide advice to maximise what you receive from the state and avoid using your own assets unnecessarily.

Wills

A will enables you to:

  • decide what happens to your property and possessions after your death
  • set out what you would like for your funeral including, for example, if you would prefer charitable donations to your favourite charity as opposed to flowers.
Without a will, your assets may be distributed according to ‘the intestacy rules’ rather than your wishes.

An SFE member can advise you and draft your will to be so that it is tax and administratively efficient and reduce the risk of a claim being made against your estate after your death.

Gifts

By making timely gifts or putting assets into trust during your lifetime, you can pass on your estate before you die.

Any proposed gift needs careful consideration of the benefits, risks and implications on tax, your financial security and any future liability for care.

It is dangerous to make a gift without getting the right advice, as you may find that you are denied state funding at the time you most need it.

An SFE member will be able to advise you on this.

Advance decisions/Living wills

An advance decision enables you to set out details of any medical treatment you do not want in the event you are later unable to communicate your wishes.

SFE members can draft the document and advise on how it applies in practice.
Why use SFE?

SFE is a national association of independent lawyers who specialise in legal services for seniors.

As specialists, SFE members are also trained in older client care so that they are able to take into account any difficulties both mental and physical which can affect older and vulnerable clients and are aware of the health and social problems that people may face.