For Tennessee families and individuals with substantial assets such as family businesses, multiple properties, investment portfolios, or large retirement accounts, estate planning is about far more than a simple will. Without careful strategy, your legacy faces serious risks: excessive federal taxes, lengthy probate delays, family disputes, and vulnerability to creditors or long-term care costs.
When you have significant wealth, the stakes are dramatically higher. Here's what makes comprehensive planning essential:
Federal Estate Taxes Loom Large
The 2026 federal exemption drops to approximately $7 million per person (with portability for couples). Anything above that faces up to 40% taxation. Poor planning means the IRS could claim a massive portion of what you've built, leaving less for your heirs.
Probate Creates Public Exposure and Delays
Tennessee probate for complex estates can take 12–24 months, with court fees eating 1–4% of your estate's value. Every asset becomes public record—your net worth, business holdings, and family details exposed to anyone who cares to look. Disputes among heirs become courtroom battles.
Family Businesses Risk Collapse
Without succession planning, family enterprises often fail within a generation. Heirs may lack management skills, fight over control, or face buyout pressures from non-family partners. Your life's work could vanish.
Blended Families Face Division
Second marriages, children from prior relationships, and stepfamilies create competing claims. Without clear planning, state law defaults can leave your spouse and children fighting over assets—or one inheriting everything while others get nothing.
Asset Protection Gaps Leave You Vulnerable
High-net-worth individuals face unique threats: business lawsuits, divorce claims against children, or Medicaid spend-down if long-term care strikes. Without proper structures, decades of wealth accumulation can evaporate.
Incapacity Planning Prevents Chaos
If illness or accident leaves you unable to manage finances, courts may appoint a stranger as conservator. Without planning, your business, investments, and properties fall under court supervision, with no guarantee your wishes are followed.
Tennessee offers several benefits for high-asset estate planning:
Strategic estate planning for substantial wealth delivers:
Basic estate planning = fill-in-the-blank forms that leave you exposed.
High-net-worth planning = customized strategies built around your specific assets, family dynamics, business interests, and long-term goals.
High-asset estate planning demands attorneys who understand complex wealth structures, business valuation, tax implications, and family dynamics, not just form-fillers. Hagar & Phillips works with:
Contact Hagar & Phillips today for sophisticated estate planning that protects your substantial assets, minimizes taxes, maintains privacy, and ensures your legacy endures. Whether in Wilson County, Lebanon, or throughout Middle Tennessee, we help high-net-worth families structure their wealth to thrive for generations. Call us at 615-784-4588 to schedule your confidential planning consultation now.