Ensuring their future, today.

Helping you decide what you need to protect yours: a simple will, a trust, or more.

BC Counselors will expertly represent you to insure your wishes are honored.

It is important to know that estate planning is not a cookie cutter matter that some form off the internet can solve. Our attorneys will sit down with you to find out what your goals are for your estate plan and then provide you with recommendations that will fit your specific needs and goals. It is also important to make sure that as your goals change over the years that you make sure your estate plan is updated properly.

We will prepare all the appropriate documents, including wills, trusts, guardianships, conservatorships, powers-of-attorney, and advance directives for health care to insure your decisions are properly and legally expressed, and to protect your estate as well as your heirs and beneficiaries. BC Counselors at Law attorneys will counsel and guide you in estate and tax planning and help you maximize your quality of life and the value of your estate, including such issues as elder and probate law, special needs and incapacity planning, gifting, and asset protection. Our attorneys are available to administer your estate, and, in the event of any contest, will vigorously defend you, your final wishes, and your estate.

BC Counselors strives to build long-standing relationships with our clients and their families.

The Importance of Estate Planning: Planning for Your Family’s Future

  • Estate Planning

    An estate plan is an all-encompassing measure that helps manage your assets after you are gone. An estate almost always includes both a trust and a will, in addition to power of attorney, healthcare directives, and beneficiary designations. BC Counselors at Law can strategize your planning for maximum benefit.

  • Trust

    A trust will allow your family to avoid probate, which can be timely and expensive. We can help you decide what type of trust is right for you and your family. A trust can give you peace of mind that your estate will not be tampered with and that the assets will go precisely where you intended them to go.

  • Will

    A person that needs a will may only need the will, as a trust may be unnecessary. A will determines who gets your property and assets after you pass away. It is a legally binding document that also appoints a legal representative (an executor) to ensure your will is upheld.

  • Health Directives

    When a patient is not able to communicate their wishes when it comes to treatment, a doctor may have to rely on a consensus from the patient’s family. a health directive gives your family peace of mind that your last wishes were carried out, and saves them from wondering if they made the wrong choice.