Estate Planning for Business Owners
Your business is likely your most valuable asset. Plan for its future like you plan for your own.
Why business owners need a different approach
Personal estate planning focuses on distributing assets to individuals. Business estate planning focuses on ensuring your company survives the transition in ownership. These are fundamentally different challenges.
- Multiple entity structures create compounding complexity
- Ownership transfer may be restricted by shareholder or operating agreements
- Business valuation affects estate tax exposure and insurance needs
- Key employees, partners, and clients need continuity assurances
- Entity documents, contracts, and licenses must be accounted for
Key estate planning strategies for business owners
Trust ownership
Place LLC or corporate interests in a revocable living trust to avoid probate and ensure seamless management succession
Buy-sell agreements
Fund buy-sell agreements with life insurance to ensure surviving owners can purchase the departing owner's interest
Valuation planning
Use valuation discounts and valuation freezes to minimize estate tax exposure while transferring wealth
Grantor retained annuity trusts
Transfer business appreciation to heirs tax-free while retaining income from the business during your lifetime
Family limited partnerships
Centralize business assets and transfer minority interests to family members at reduced valuations
The continuity layer
An estate plan transfers ownership legally. A continuity plan makes the transition actually work by documenting what exists, where it is stored, who manages it, and what to do next. Without this layer, your family and partners spend months figuring out the operational details.
Use a continuity archive to record entity structures, key document locations, advisor contacts, insurance policies, and emergency instructions for your successors.
Start with the free checklist
Use the Free Estate Continuity Checklist to organize what exists, where it is located, and who your family or advisors should contact first.
Build Your Business Continuity Archive
Organize entity structures, key documents, and advisor contacts so your successors know exactly how to proceed.