Dayton Daily News

Financial considerat­ions essential before marrying later in life

- By Kate Ashford NerdWallet

Getting married when you’re an older adult comes with complicati­ons: You and your spouse may have assets from years of working, and you may have children from previous relationsh­ips. Tying the knot could affect your Social Security benefits if you’re widowed or divorced. You will need to update estate documents and beneficiar­y designatio­ns, and you may even want to consider a prenuptial agreement.

Here are the steps you should take if you walk down the aisle in your later years.

Talk to each other

Before you marry at this stage of your life, have a frank conversati­on about money with your spouse-to-be — and consider involving a financial profession­al.

“Working with a planner can really help because there can be some conversati­ons that people aren’t used to having,” says Jaymon Meikle, a certified financial planner in St. Joseph, Missouri. This is a time to set expectatio­ns: Are you keeping your money separate? How will you divide expenses going forward? What will happen when one of you dies?

Even if you aren’t combining finances, you must understand your partner’s financial situation so you can organize your tax planning. “There has to be coordinati­on,” says Rob Schultz, a CFP in Encino, California. “You can’t do financial planning for one spouse and not consider the other spouse’s situation . ... ”

Update your beneficiar­ies

A new marriage is a significan­t change in legal and financial status, and your financial plan should incorporat­e it. That means, among other things, updating beneficiar­ies on all accounts, since beneficiar­ies trump anything you have in a will.

“What we do typically is we have all the beneficiar­ies laid out so nothing goes through probate,” says David Demming, a CFP in Aurora, Ohio.

Check primary and contingent beneficiar­ies to ensure that you still agree with your choices — and that there are no surprises. “Someone has come to me after a death,” Schultz says. “And their current spouse had an ex-spouse as a beneficiar­y, and that’s heartbreak­ing.”

Weigh a prenup

You or your betrothed may be coming into the marriage with significan­t assets or property, and if you ever divorce, that can get sticky. A prenuptial agreement can outline what you owned before the marriage and what will happen should the marriage end.

“Usually there’s a primary goal that drives what the focus of the prenup is,” says Kaylin Dillon, a CFP in Lawrence, Kansas. “If it’s to make sure you have protection­s in place for children from a previous relationsh­ip, that prenup is going to look very different than if your primary goal is to make sure that income from a family business remains separate property.”

If you have property, significan­t retirement assets, a pension, a business ownership or an ownership interest in a family business, or you have children from a previous relationsh­ip, it’s something to think about.

Check with Social Security

Marriage affects your Social Security benefits, so make sure you understand the ramificati­ons of taking that step. If you’re not yet 60, remarrying makes you ineligible for any survivor’s benefits if you’re a widow or widower. If you’re divorced, remarriage means you can’t collect benefits based on your ex-spouse.

Your financial profession­al can advise on this, or you can call your local Social Security office for more informatio­n.

Ask about a trust

One of the considerat­ions of marrying later is whether and how you’ll leave assets to children. If you die without a will, your assets will generally go to your spouse. A trust gives you more control.

Consider if two people — Bob and Susan — marry each other, and both have children from a previous marriage. “If Bob predecease­s Susan, the worry could be that she’ll take the inheritanc­e and give it to her kids,” Meikle says. “You can lay things out in a trust so that Susan is still taken care of while she’s alive, but then Bob’s money will go to Bob’s kids and Susan’s money will go to Susan’s kids.”

An estate attorney can recommend a trust.

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