Written by: Max Elliott | Max Elliott Law
If my 12-year-old niece giddily knew about the Obergefell ruling the day it was handed down, most people in America probably know that marriage is now a fundamental right belonging to all persons in the United States, regardless of the marital parties’ gender. Lesbian, gay, bigender, transgender, or queer persons can marry who they want. It is a cause célèbre indeed.
Yet, what does this mean in terms of estate planning, estate administration, and wealth preservation? The decision in Obergefell v. Hodges created a positive shift of tectonic magnitude for planning in the LGBTQ community because, where states banned or didn’t recognize LGBTQ marriages before, moving ahead LGBTQ married couples can now look forward to:
Less complex estate planning.
Less contentious estate administration.
Greater wealth preservation and wealth building.
The above focuses on estate planning and administration benefits, but there are more than 1100 benefits married LGBTQ couples may begin to enjoy. Couples should thoroughly review all benefits with their trusted advisors before taking actions because every family is unique. However, overall, the U.S. Supreme Court just made the estate and wealth-building world for the LGBTQ community a lot less complex, and less complexity generally means more emotional, legal, and financial stability; and we will all benefit from that.