Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can do a budget cremation for around $1k. It’s absurd to blow $15k-$20k on a funeral.
This
Saving money isn’t everything some people value celebration of life services for family and friends.
Some people do not have a choice, financially.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You know spouses can be buried in veterans cemeteries right?
But depending on which veteran cemetery, this can take up to a year or more.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can do a budget cremation for around $1k. It’s absurd to blow $15k-$20k on a funeral.
This
Saving money isn’t everything some people value celebration of life services for family and friends.
Anonymous wrote:You know spouses can be buried in veterans cemeteries right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can do a budget cremation for around $1k. It’s absurd to blow $15k-$20k on a funeral.
This
Anonymous wrote:You can do a budget cremation for around $1k. It’s absurd to blow $15k-$20k on a funeral.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You pay for her funeral yourself and when her estate distributes, you reimburse yourself on her estate. This is what people I know have done. It's also why you need to make sure she writes a will, so the estate is resolved rapidly. Otherwise it can take years.
Or you disburse the money from her own account at her death. Even with power of attorney, I'm not sure how legal that is.
Or she can prepay, but not a lot of elderly people like to do that... My grandfather did it, but my parents are not the sort to accept their mortality in such a practical way.
POA dissolves at death and accounts are frozen. Checks will bounce. Credit cards can stay open for a while.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1. It is not your money
2. It is not your money.
It *will* be her money going out the door if she doesn’t have immediate access to the estate money to pay for the funeral. She’ll have to pay for the funeral out of pocket and get reimbursed later — depending on the jurisdiction, it can be months and months later. Also, mortgage payments, insurance, etc — any other expenses that need to be paid in a timely manner.
One tip — you need to have your name *on the account* that the money is in. If you have a power of attorney, it will cease to be operative upon death. Some jurisdictions take forever to issue letters testamentary for the executor, so that’s no help.
You don’t want your name on any accounts that have a substantial amount of money, because you’d lose the stepped up basis that heirs get. However, I’d put just enough to cover the funeral and any other expenses in a joint savings or money market account, even if you have to open up a new account to keep it from being inadvertently drained by your Mom.
I was once executor of a complex estate in a state that is very slow for probate, and I was at least $20,000 out of pocket before I could get reimbursed by the estate.
Anonymous wrote:I would think funeral home would just need a deposit then pay balance within 30 days. I would call and ask. I would be careful about taking that money out now because you will bump up how much she owes in taxes.
Anonymous wrote:My Dad put my sister and I as payable on death for his bank account. We got the money within a week of submitting the death certificate. If you have POA, you can make sure she has enough money for a funeral in her bank account.
Anonymous wrote:1. It is not your money
2. It is not your money.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here:
Thanks for all the replies.
Dad was military buried with veterans so we need to buy a plot. I like the idea of buying that now. (I will speak with her about that). Also- I didn’t know you can pre-pay arrangements. I will call local funeral home and ask how that process works.
My stepfather is buried at a VA cemetery. When my mother died she went in with him.
Check it out.
Anonymous wrote:She can go ahead and make the arrangements she would like and pre-pay. That’s what my grandfather did. It was so helpful to my father and aunts - they knew that everything was arranged the way Grandpa wanted, and payment was already taken care of.