Anonymous wrote:I don't have much detail on the trusts other than they are generation skipping (from my grandparents to my sister and me) with my dad as executor (and yes even if my mom is still living it's contingent on my dad). They have their own money which will be passed to their grandkids if there's any left
Anonymous wrote:I don't have much detail on the trusts other than they are generation skipping (from my grandparents to my sister and me) with my dad as executor (and yes even if my mom is still living it's contingent on my dad). They have their own money which will be passed to their grandkids if there's any left
Anonymous wrote:I would ask your parents for more info about the trusts for planning purposes. Our generation skipping trust does go to my dh and his siblings when his parents die and then to our children (and nieces and nephews ) when our generation dies. But his parents could use it up...or we could use it up and there would be nothing there even though it is set up to be passed.
And I married into the family...if we divorce I get nothing. If DH dies, his siblings control the trust until it transfers to the next generation. So, yes, if you have the ability to plan for your husband if something goes wrong, that would be smart.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't have much detail on the trusts other than they are generation skipping (from my grandparents to my sister and me) with my dad as executor (and yes even if my mom is still living it's contingent on my dad). They have their own money which will be passed to their grandkids if there's any left
This is a good idea. Sometimes I wish I were white.
Why do you assume OP is white? What does race have to do with this?
Anonymous wrote:It sounds like he's the trustee, not executor. If your grandparents set up a GST, then you absolutely have the right to receive statements from the brokerage where the funds are held. If your grandparents have passed away, then you should be able to access the funds within reasonable limits. Generally, trusts are meant to pay for HEW: Health, Education & Welfare of the beneficiary. You should be using the funds for preschool tuition and nanny fees. Bring this up with your father so you can budget appropriately.
Anonymous wrote:It sounds like he's the trustee, not executor. If your grandparents set up a GST, then you absolutely have the right to receive statements from the brokerage where the funds are held. If your grandparents have passed away, then you should be able to access the funds within reasonable limits. Generally, trusts are meant to pay for HEW: Health, Education & Welfare of the beneficiary. You should be using the funds for preschool tuition and nanny fees. Bring this up with your father so you can budget appropriately.
Anonymous wrote:HHI of around 140K with a toddler. Right now, dad stays home with the baby (some side income from consulting, but not his priority right now). Our income covers our needs but not much left over at the end of the day. We're in the process of looking at preschools and realizing tuition is going to require one adjustments. Intention is for dad to go back to working full time, but give current political environment, unclear how quickly that would happen.
Right now we save some for retirement, but not a ton. 10% of my gross automatically goes to a 401k (employer benefit). I don't add anything else right now. We add $2500 each to Roth's for both of us each year. At 30 and 35 we have about $180k in various retirement accounts right now.
We're not doing a 529 for the baby as her grandparents on both sides have started one for her and we expect through that college will end up fully paid for.
With that context, here's my question. I know we're behind with retirement. We just have no flexibility and will have even less when the baby goes to preschool... BUT I know I have a trust fund coming to me one my parents are gone (hopefully in many many years). I have no idea how much is in there but know it's probably at least $1M (each for my sister and me left to us by our grandparents).
How worried do I need to be about retirement given this? Should we work to get our budget down to save more for retirement or are we ok given the trust?
Should we prioritize saving for my husband in the off chance we would separate? We have a prenup detailing that the trust is mine so I don't want to leave him in a lurch... thoughts?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't have much detail on the trusts other than they are generation skipping (from my grandparents to my sister and me) with my dad as executor (and yes even if my mom is still living it's contingent on my dad). They have their own money which will be passed to their grandkids if there's any left
This is a good idea. Sometimes I wish I were white.