Wealth Planning Law Group
attorney Todd M. Villarrubia

Todd Villarrubia

Attorney at Law
Get To Know Todd

How to Protect Wealth over Generations

Posted On: July 25, 2024

By: Todd Villarrubia

Todd M. Villarrubia, an authority in wealth planning and preservation, brings over 30 years of in-depth, experience to the complex challenges of safeguarding familial and individual wealth. Based in New Orleans, Louisiana, his expertise is not only recognized in the local community but also reverberates within the legal industry.
how to protect wealth over generations
HBO's The Gilded Age dramatizes the privileged lives of some of America's wealthiest families in late 19th century New York City.

The Gilded Age was a time of rapid economic growth, creating extraordinary new wealth, materialistic excess, political corruption, and terrible poverty and struggle for the lower economic classes. Famous families from this era, including the Rockefellers, Carnegies, Vanderbilts and Astors, had huge wealth. Nevertheless, not all could protect wealth over generations, says an article from mondaq.

The Vanderbilt family's wealth came from shipping and railroad empires. In 1877, the family’s wealth was estimated at $200 million—$105 billion in today’s value. The family name continues, but with every generation, the size of the wealth dwindles. While the exact terms of the Vanderbilt estate plan are unknown, it’s understood that the family had no strategic long-term plan.

The Pulitzer family is best known for the Pulitzer Prize and the founding of the Columbia Journalism School. Two generations after Joseph Pulitzer's death, a grandson lost most of the massive fortune in a single bad investment. Without a multi-generational plan for wealth transfer, the fortune evaporated.

The Rockefellers are known as one of the Gilded Age families that got estate planning right. They used irrevocable trusts to protect assets from wasteful spending by heirs over multiple generations. The Rockefellers created business succession plans and incorporated philanthropic goals that are still used today.

Your family can benefit from trust and estate plans, even if you’re not worth $100 billion. Creating a strategic plan to transfer and protect wealth over generations can happen with the skilled experience of an estate planning attorney. Teaching financial literacy and shared family values, including understanding the importance of stewarding wealth and philanthropy, is as important as the money itself.

Generation-skipping trusts (GSTs) are just one means of preserving wealth transfer. With a GTS, a grandparent can leave assets in the trust to grandchildren and other beneficiaries at least 37.5 years younger. By skipping a generation, federal estate taxes aren’t paid twice on inherited assets. Trusts have also been used to offer creditor protection for generations. Divorcing parties can’t access funds in a trust.

If appropriate, there are some states where perpetual trusts are permitted. An estate planning attorney will be able to make recommendations as to whether these are appropriate for your family.

Selecting trustees and successor trustees is extremely important for multi-generational wealth to last. Your estate planning attorney will also guide you in choosing either individuals or institutions to ensure trustee power is in the right hands.

Reference: mondaq (June 18, 2024) “Estate Planning to Protect Generational Wealth Transfers: Lessons From The Gilded Age”

Photo by Morgan Housel on Unsplash

Request A Consultation
Share This Post

IMS - Estate Planning and Elder Law Practice Growth Advisors
Powered by
chevron-downarrow-right