Estate Planning

Estate planning is not just about what happens when you die — it is about making sure your wishes are respected, your assets are protected, and the people who depend on you are looked after, whatever happens.

Estate Planning

Making sure your assets go to the right people at the right time

Without proper estate planning, your assets may not end up where you intend. The people you want to benefit may not benefit. The process may be slow, expensive, and stressful for those you leave behind. We help you avoid all of that.

Introduction

Who is left to deal with your financial wishes when you are no longer here? Do you have a valid will that reflects your current situation? Are the right powers of attorney in place in case you lose capacity? Are your investments and assets structured in a way that makes transfer straightforward?

These are the questions we help our clients work through. Estate planning touches law, finance, and tax simultaneously — and we coordinate with your solicitor and accountant to make sure everything is properly aligned.

What's Included

One of the most common situations we encounter is clients with significant assets whose wills and estate structures have not been reviewed in years — sometimes decades. Family situations change, assets grow, and legislation evolves. An outdated estate plan can be as problematic as having none at all.

We work alongside your solicitor to ensure your estate structure reflects your current wishes and family situation, that your assets are set up to transfer efficiently, and that nothing is left to chance or legal default.

Will review and estate structure assessment

We review your existing will and estate structure to identify gaps, outdated provisions, and potential inefficiencies — then work alongside your solicitor to bring everything up to date.

We help you assess whether a trust is appropriate for your situation, and if so, work alongside your solicitor to ensure it is properly structured and integrated with your investment and financial plan.

We make sure your powers of attorney are in place and up to date, so that your financial and personal affairs can be managed on your behalf if needed without costly court proceedings.

We ensure your investment portfolio, account ownership, and beneficiary designations are all consistent with your estate planning intentions — closing the gap between your financial plan and your will.

What people say about Collaborative Consulting

Our Process

When you work with us, we use our proven 3-step system. By understanding your situation and the goals you want to achieve, we work out a unique plan to help you get there smoothly.

How and what we do

Estate planning that gives you peace of mind today

30+

Years of experience helping New Zealanders structure their estates to protect assets and ensure their wishes are respected.

Estate planning is one of the most important — and most commonly delayed — parts of a comprehensive financial plan. We make it straightforward, coordinated, and completely aligned with your broader financial strategy.

Frequently Asked Questions

Have a question about estate planning or structuring your affairs? We’re happy to help — get in touch.

What is estate planning?

Estate planning is the process of arranging your financial affairs so that your assets are distributed according to your wishes when you die, and that your affairs can be managed effectively if you lose capacity during your lifetime. It typically involves wills, trusts, and powers of attorney.

Yes. A financial plan and a will serve different purposes. Your financial plan manages and grows your wealth during your lifetime. Your will determines what happens to it afterwards. Without a valid will, your assets may not go to the people you intend.

A trust is a legal structure that holds assets on behalf of beneficiaries. Trusts can be useful for asset protection, estate planning, and in some circumstances, tax efficiency. Whether a trust is appropriate for your situation depends on your assets, family structure, and goals — we can help you think this through.

An enduring power of attorney allows a person you trust to manage your financial and personal affairs if you lose the capacity to do so yourself. Without one, a court process is required to appoint someone — which is expensive, time-consuming, and may not reflect your wishes.

Your investment portfolio is one of the key assets that will be distributed through your estate. We make sure your portfolio structure, ownership, and documentation are all consistent with your estate planning intentions, and that there are no gaps between your financial plan and your will.

Estate plans should be reviewed whenever your circumstances change significantly — marriage, divorce, the birth of children or grandchildren, a significant change in assets, or the death of a beneficiary or trustee. We recommend a review at least every three to five years regardless.

A conversation to understand your situation, your family structure, and your wishes. We then work alongside your solicitor to ensure the legal documents reflect your intentions and integrate with your overall financial strategy.