When the calendar year is winding down, many families in Raleigh, Cary, Clayton, Wake Forest, Pinehurst, and across North Carolina are focused on holidays, travel, and tax deadlines. It is also one of the best times to give your estate plan a quick but meaningful checkup, so your documents still match your life, your assets, and your wishes.
Triangle Estate Lawyers, the sister estate planning company of Triangle Divorce Lawyers, focuses on estate planning, probate, and asset protection for North Carolina families. Our goal is to help you move into the new year with clarity, care, and confidence.
Below is a practical, North Carolina focused end of year estate planning checklist you can use before December 31. This article is for general information only and is not legal or tax advice. For personal guidance, it is important to speak with a North Carolina estate planning attorney and your tax adviser.
Confirm your will and revocable living trust still reflect your wishes
Start by asking a simple question:
If something happened tomorrow, would I still be comfortable with who inherits, who is in charge, and how things are handled
As you review your will and any revocable living trust, check:
- Who receives what. Have there been marriages, divorces, births, deaths, new stepchildren, or major changes in relationships this year
- Your personal representative or executor. Is this person still organized, trustworthy, and willing to serve
- Trustees. If you use a revocable living trust, are your successor trustees still good choices
- Guardians for minor children. Do your named guardians still live nearby, share your values, and have a stable home
If the answer to any of these questions is no or you feel unsure, it is time to schedule a review with a North Carolina estate planning attorney to update your will or trust.
Make sure your powers of attorney and health care directives are current
A complete North Carolina estate plan usually includes:
- A general durable (financial) power of attorney
- The health care power of attorney
- An advance directive or living will
At year end, double check:
- Are your named agents still local, trustworthy, and able to communicate with your banks, financial institutions, and doctors
- Do your documents clearly authorize your agents to act with modern accounts such as online banking, retirement accounts, and digital assets
- Do your health care wishes about life support, pain management, and organ donation still reflect your values
If your documents are more than five to seven years old or your relationships have changed, an attorney can review and update your powers of attorney and health care directives, so they work when your family needs them.
Review of beneficiary designations on life insurance and retirement accounts
Beneficiary designations often control who inherits certain assets, even if your will says something different. This usually includes:
- Life insurance policies
- Employer retirement plans such as 401(k) or 403(b) accounts
- IRAs and Roth IRAs
- Some brokerages or bank accounts with transfer on death (TOD) or payable on death (POD) instructions
End of year is a smart time to:
- Confirm that primary and contingent beneficiaries are listed on each account
- Remove former spouses where appropriate after a divorce
- Coordinate your designations with your will or trust so your plan works as one unified strategy
- If you use a trust for minor children or a family member with special needs, confirm the trust is properly named as beneficiary, instead of the child directly
This type of review is especially helpful for families planning around North Carolina probate and federal tax rules.
Check retirement account RMDs and inherited accounts
If you are at or near retirement, end of year is a key time to review:
- Whether you have taken any required minimum distributions (RMDs) for the year
- How you are managing any inherited retirement accounts, including payout timelines
Your checklist:
- Confirm you have taken any required RMDs for the current year to avoid penalties
- Review inherited IRAs to be sure you understand when distributions must be made
- Coordinate RMD and distribution decisions with your overall estate, investment, and tax plan
Because retirement rules change over time, it is wise to have your attorney, financial adviser, and tax professional work together to keep your plan up to date.
Take advantage of annual gifts and charitable opportunities
If you include lifetime giving in your estate plan, year-end is a natural time to revisit your gifting and charitable giving strategy.
Questions to consider:
- Do you want to make year-end gifts to children, grandchildren, or other loved ones within your budget
- Would it help to fund or add to a 529 college savings plan for younger family members
- Are there charities, community organizations, or faith communities you want to support this year
Most North Carolina families will not owe federal estate tax, but proactive gifting can still help you:
- Support loved ones during your lifetime
- Reduce the size of your taxable estate if you have a larger portfolio
- Aligning your giving with your values and legacy
Your attorney and tax adviser can help you decide if annual gifting or charitable strategies should be part of your long-term plan.
Review how your assets are titled
Even the best drafted will or trust can fail if your accounts and property are not titled correctly. As part of your year-end review, look at:
- Real estate. Is your home titled in your individual name, jointly with a spouse or partner, or in a trust
- Bank and investment accounts. Are accounts owned individually, jointly, or by trust?
- Business interests. Do your operating agreements, shareholder agreements, or buy sell plans match your estate plans?
Your goals as a North Carolina resident often include:
- Reducing the need for full probate where appropriate
- Ensuring the right person has access if you become incapacitated
- Keeping clear records for your future executor or trustee
If you are not sure whether your asset titling matches your plan, bring recent statements to your review meeting so your estate planning attorney can identify and fix any gaps.
Organize documents and information for your future executor or trustee
One of the greatest gifts you can give your loved ones is organization. At the end of the year, set aside time to:
- Create or update a master list of accounts and key assets, including banks, investments, retirement accounts, and insurance policies
- Write down the physical location of original documents such as your will, trust, powers of attorney, and real estate deeds
- Update contact information for your estate planning attorney, financial adviser, CPA, and other professionals
- Keep a simple list of digital assets such as important online accounts and subscriptions, with instructions for how your executor should find passwords or use a password manager
Store this information in a secure location and let your trusted decision makers know how to access it in an emergency.
Revisit long term care and incapacity planning
Estate planning is not only about what happens after death. It is also about who can step in if you become ill, injured, or unable to manage your affairs.
Your year-end checkup might include:
- Reviewing long term care insurance, disability coverage, and emergency savings
- Confirming your agents under your powers of attorney understand your expectations and feel comfortable serving
- Considering whether you need additional planning for loved ones with disabilities or chronic health conditions, such as special needs trusts or caregiver arrangements
These steps can reduce stress for you and your family, especially as parents age or adult children move back home or out of state.
Talk with your family about your wishes
Many North Carolina families want to avoid conflict and confusion. A short, calm family conversation can:
- Clarify who will handle finances, health decisions, and guardianship roles
- Set expectations about major assets such as the family home, a family business, or sentimental heirlooms
- Reassure loved ones that you have a plan in place and that they will not be left guessing
You do not need to share every detail. Even sharing the big picture and where your documents are located can make a difficult period much easier later.
Schedule a year end or early new year review with a North Carolina estate planning attorney
Even if nothing significant changed this year, a periodic review helps keep your estate plan aligned with:
- Updates in North Carolina law
- Tax changes that may affect your estate or your beneficiaries
- Shifts in your assets, family, and long-term goals
An experienced North Carolina estate planning attorney can:
- Spot gaps that might cause unnecessary probate, expense, or conflict
- Coordinate your will, trusts, powers of attorney, and beneficiary designations so they work together
- Collaborate with your financial and tax advisers to keep your plan practical and tax aware
Estate planning support from attorney Sheneshia Fitts
At Triangle Estate Lawyers, attorney Sheneshia Fitts provides estate planning guidance for North Carolina families who want practical, personalized plans for wills, trusts, and incapacity documents. If you have questions about this end of year checklist or want to understand your options, you can learn more about Sheneshia and the rest of the team on our About Us page.
Ready to review your estate plan before the year ends
If you live in Raleigh, Cary, Clayton, Wake Forest, Pinehurst, or the surrounding Triangle area and would like help with an end of year estate planning review, the team at Triangle Estate Lawyers, the estate planning sister company of Triangle Divorce Lawyers, is here to support you.
You can schedule a confidential consultation with our team by contacting Triangle Estate Lawyers online or by calling (919) 851-3717 to talk about your North Carolina estate planning goals.





