Estate Planning When a Family Member Is an Addict

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, more than 42,000 people lost their lives due to opioid use in 2016, a fivefold increase from 1999.

Opioid addiction has reached epidemic proportions, with drug overdoses now the leading cause of death for Americans under age 50. Families struggling with the emotional and financial damage, are the subject of the article How to leave money to a family member with an addiction” from MarketWatch.

Even good children from loving families become addicted and are driven to steal and lie to get money to support their habits. Parents of children are wracked by guilt and anger. The stories of families spending hundreds of thousands of dollars in an effort to help their children are growing in number—as are the number of families who exhaust their retirement savings paying for rehabilitation and related services.

Trusted family advisors, including estate planning attorneys and financial advisors, find themselves working with families to protect the family finances and the well-being of their addicted family members. The fallout from addiction creates many secondary problems for families.

Estate planning for a family grappling with addiction addresses many different issues, not just inheritance. Guardianship of minor children and protecting the interests of family members are among the issues that estate planning addresses. A mindfully created estate plan can serve as a resource and a means of protecting a legacy.

Lump sum distributions or full bequests to an adult struggling with addiction can be deadly, if the person uses the funds to purchase large quantities of drugs. At the same time, writing someone out of the will completely and withdrawing all support, can be devastating to the addicted adult and the family.

Creating a trust can help to protect assets and ensure that there is some degree of accountability in how the distributions are made. Incentive trusts, where a certain behavior or accomplishment markers are determined, can be used to encourage behaviors.

This may mean that the addicted adult does not receive funds, until after passing a drug test, attending a certain number of treatment sessions or entering a residential rehabilitation program.

Incentive trusts are part of a special area of estate planning. Therefore, it is necessary to work with an attorney who has experience with trusts and with incentive trusts. Ideally, the attorney who helps your family, will be one who is also familiar with the impact of addiction on families.

Creating incentives for positive outcomes includes having consequences when the person fails to meet the terms of the trust.

In this situation, a trustee who is extremely trustworthy and not prone to being manipulated is necessary. They will need to make sure the person adheres to the requirements and while they may be given certain levels of discretion, this person will need to be strong-willed enough to withstand a strong-minded, potentially aggressive, addict.

This kind of trust may require the beneficiary to submit to specific terms and provide access to their health records, which itself requires a HIPAA waiver for the trustee.

Creating an estate plan with an incentive trust presents many challenges for the family and the trustee. It may well become a highly charged, emotional process. However, talking about these issues openly is part of preparing for the future. Concerns about what will happen to an addictive member of the family after the parents are gone, will hopefully create some peace of mind in a turbulent setting.

Reference: MarketWatch (Jan. 14, 2019) How to leave money to a family member with an addiction”

Suggested Key Terms: Estate Planning, Inheritance, Finances, Addiction, Trusts, Incentives, Trustee

About the author

Bob Brumfield

Attorney Bob Brumfield has been practicing law since 1984 and regularly receives the “Top Lawyers in California” award as well as the “Client Distinction” and “Client Champion” awards from Martindale-Hubbell.

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