Protect the Future of Your Business with Estate Planning

Words: Lisa Hagenson

If you own a business, planning what happens to it after you pass away is important. This is called "estate planning,” and it’s a way to make sure your assets are handled the way you want to help keep your business running smoothly.

Why Business Owners Need an Estate Plan

  • Keeping Your Business Running: An estate plan helps keep your business operating without interruption by identifying successors and outlining their responsibilities.

  • Minimizing Taxes: Proper planning may reduce estate, capital gains, and income taxes. You can use tools like trusts and life insurance policies to accomplish this.

  • Avoiding Probate: Probate is a legal process to settle someone’s estate after they die, and it can be expensive and take a long time. Using tools like trusts can help avoid this.

  • Protecting Family Interests: Estate planning ensures your family’s financial needs are taken care of and helps prevent arguments over who gets what.

Key Considerations

  • Succession Planning: Decide whether to pass your business to the next generation or sell it to a third party.

  • Asset Value Assessment: Figure out how much your business and other assets are worth. This helps with taxes and deciding how to divide everything up.

  • Legal Agreements: Set up agreements, like a Buy-Sell Agreement, which makes it easier to transfer ownership when needed.

  • Tax Planning Strategies: Work with professionals to develop tax-efficient strategies for transferring assets.

  • Updates to the Estate Plan: Review your plan regularly to make sure it still fits your business, family situation, and any new tax laws.
An attorney who specializes in estate and business succession can discuss a wide range of planning options. To learn more, talk to your Federated Insurance® marketing representative for a referral from Federated’s network of independent attorneys


What gives with head protection? Why workers want to keep their hard hats and ditch safety helmets.
April 2025

Last August, I took my pickup to the dealership for a nagging check engine light. While it was being looked over, I chatted with the salesman I normally deal with, and he told me about the latest and greatest 2025 models. He told me how the twin turbo inl

Government Affairs: Bringing North Carolina to Washington, D.C. and Hopefully Young People to Your Jobsites
April 2025

For you long time members of the Mason Contractors Association of America you likely remember our Annual Washington, D.C. Fly-In where MCAA members from around the country would come to Washington, D.C. meeting with Members of Congress from their home sta

Chairman's Message: While We Are Still Here
April 2025

I truly value my days working on construction sites during the summers of my high school and college days. Some moments in our youth are so clearly meaningful that we file them away in our subconscious to be recalled when life events require inspiration.

Contractor Tip of the Month: The Tough Calls That Define a Leader
April 2025

In construction, every project balances a delicate trio: coordination, precision, and timing. However, beyond blueprints and schedules, leadership demands something far greater—the ability to lead and make difficult decisions that shape the future of a co