Alaska Community Property Agreement: Opt-In Rules for Married Couples
Alaska lets married couples elect community property for a double step-up in basis. Learn how to execute a community property agreement or trust under AS 34.77.
All articles about Alaska Basic Estate Planning Kit.
Alaska lets married couples elect community property for a double step-up in basis. Learn how to execute a community property agreement or trust under AS 34.77.
Alaska's RUFADAA law governs digital asset access after death. Learn how to plan for email, social media, cryptocurrency, and online accounts in your estate.
How Alaska's dynasty trust laws allow 1,000-year trusts with no state income tax, plus domestic asset protection trust (DAPT) basics for Alaska families.
Alaska estate planning attorney fees range from $1,500-$4,500. Learn what drives costs, when you need an attorney vs. DIY, and how to prepare.
Complete Alaska estate planning checklist covering wills, TOD deeds, POA, ANCSA stock wills, PFD claims, advance directives, and medevac prep.
Compare the Alaska Basic Estate Planning Kit against hiring an estate planning attorney. Cost, coverage, and when each option is the right choice.
Avoid the most common Alaska estate planning mistakes — from unfunded trusts and missed PFD deadlines to unrecorded TOD deeds and ANCSA stock will gaps.
Alaska's homestead exemption protects up to $72,900 of home equity from creditors. Learn how it works, its limits, and how it interacts with estate planning.
Compare Alaska medevac membership programs, costs, coverage gaps, and why medical evacuation planning belongs in your estate plan.
Learn how Alaska quit claim deeds work, when to use them, recording requirements at DNR, and safer alternatives for estate planning transfers.
Compare revocable living trusts vs wills in Alaska — probate avoidance, Medicaid protection, privacy, costs, and when each tool is the right choice.
Alaska trust laws allow 1,000-year dynasty trusts, no state income tax, and opt-in community property. Learn which trust type fits your family.
Alaska requires two witnesses for a formal will but recognizes holographic (handwritten) wills without witnesses. Learn execution rules under AS 13.12.
Why generic platforms like LegalZoom, Trust & Will, and FreeWill miss Alaska-specific requirements — and what to use instead for community property, ANCSA shares, and TOD deeds.
Learn how to execute an ANCSA stock will (Testamentary Disposition Form) to control who inherits your Native Corporation shares and avoid fractional freezes.
Find the right estate planning resource for Alaska's unique community property election. Compare options for couples who want the stepped-up basis advantage.
Estate planning resources for Alaska Native Corporation shareholders. How to protect ANCSA shares, file Testamentary Disposition Forms, and prevent default corporate distribution.
How to handle cabins, off-grid land, and remote Alaska property in your estate plan — recording districts, legal descriptions, TOD deeds, and access issues.
A step-by-step approach to estate protection in Alaska using TOD deeds, beneficiary designations, and probate avoidance — no attorney required for most situations.