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What you should know about your aging parents’ finances

OKLAHOMA CITY – Many adult children don’t know much about their elderly parent’s financial situation or end-of-life plans, but they need to.

Getting up to speed on their finances, insurance policies, long-term care plans and other information is important because someday you might have to help them handle their financial affairs or care, or execute their estate plan after they die.

Without this information, your job becomes much more difficult.

Here are some tips that can help:

Have the Conversation

If you’re uncomfortable talking to your parents about this topic, use this article as a prompt or start by talking about your own finances or estate plan as a way to ease into it. Also see TheConversationProject.org, which offers free kits that can help you kick-start these discussions.

It’s also a good idea to get your siblings involved too. This can help you head off possible hard feelings, plus, with others involved, your parents will know everyone is concerned.

When you talk with your parents, you’ll need to collect some information, find out where they keep key documents and how they want certain things handled when they die or if they become incapacitated. Here’s a checklist of areas to focus on.

PERSONAL & HEALTH INFORMATION

LEGAL DOCUMENTS

FINANCIAL RECORDS

Printable Financial Checklist   4-seniors financial checklist

For more tips, see the Eldercare Locator publication “Let’s Talk: Starting the Conversation about Health, Legal, Financial and End-of-Life Issues,” click here.