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HIPAA authorizations, healthcare-agent designations, and the other ancillary documents that make the rest of your estate plan work — funeral instructions, personal property direction, and digital asset inventories.
Schedule a Free ConsultationAuthorized under N.C.G.S. § 31-51.1 (NC Personal Property Memorandum), S.C. Code § 62-2-512 (SC Tangible Personal Property Memorandum), 45 C.F.R. § 164.508 (federal HIPAA Authorization), and related provisions, a complete estate plan includes more than a will or trust, powers of attorney, and healthcare directives. A set of ancillary documents fills the practical and legal gaps that the core documents leave — directing specific personal property, authorizing HIPAA access, providing emergency instructions, and inventorying digital assets. These documents are not afterthoughts; they are the difference between an estate that administers smoothly and one that leaves your family guessing.
Ryan prepares ancillary documents as a standard part of every estate plan engagement. Many are included in the flat-fee price; some are available as standalone documents for clients who already have core documents in place. Each is drafted to coordinate precisely with the will or trust it accompanies.
The most common oversight in estate planning is treating the signing of the will or trust as the final step — when in reality, the ancillary documents, the funding of the trust, the beneficiary designation updates, and the Letter of Instruction are what make the plan actually work at death or incapacity.
Each ancillary document addresses a specific gap in a standard estate plan. Together, they provide the operational layer that turns a legally valid estate plan into a practically effective one.
A written, signed document directing specific items of tangible personal property to specific beneficiaries — referenced by the will but separate from it. Under N.C.G.S. § 31-51.1, a written document listing specific items and recipients is given effect as an instruction to the executor, even if it is executed after the will. This means you can redirect grandma's jewelry, the coin collection, or the antique furniture without re-executing the entire will. Ryan drafts the will to specifically authorize and incorporate the personal property memorandum.
Federal HIPAA law restricts healthcare providers from sharing your medical information without your written authorization. A HIPAA release, executed concurrently with your healthcare POA, authorizes named individuals to receive your medical information. Without it, your spouse, adult children, or healthcare agent may be denied information about your condition — even in an emergency room situation. Ryan includes HIPAA authorization in every estate plan.
Every revocable living trust is accompanied by a pour-over will. The pour-over will serves as a safety net: assets acquired after the trust is created, or assets the client forgot to fund, are directed by the will into the trust at death. These assets still go through probate before entering the trust — which is why proper trust funding is critical — but the pour-over will ensures they eventually reach the trust beneficiaries under the trust's terms.
A Letter of Instruction is not a legally binding document — it is your most practical legacy document. It tells your executor where everything is: account numbers and financial institution contact information, insurance policies, digital accounts, the location of original documents, login credentials (reference the digital asset memorandum), funeral preferences, pets and their care, business interests, and any personal messages to your family. A good letter of instruction can reduce estate administration time from months to weeks.
A separate, updateable document inventorying digital accounts, cryptocurrency holdings, and access credentials — referenced in (but separate from) the will or trust. Because the will becomes a public record in probate, credentials must never be included in the will itself. The Digital Asset Memorandum provides a secure, private inventory that can be updated whenever accounts change. See Digital Estate Planning for full detail on RUFADAA and cryptocurrency planning.
Retirement accounts (IRAs, 401(k)s), life insurance policies, and some bank accounts pass outside of the will or trust by beneficiary designation. These designations override the will — an out-of-date beneficiary designation naming an ex-spouse or a deceased parent controls the asset regardless of what the will says. Ryan provides a beneficiary designation review and written instructions as part of every estate plan engagement.
A short document — typically 2–3 pages — summarizing the key provisions of a trust for presentation to financial institutions and title companies without disclosing the full trust terms. The certificate confirms the trust's legal name, the trustee's identity, the trustee's powers, and the trust's tax identification information. Banks and brokerages require the certificate when re-titling accounts into trust ownership. Ryan prepares the certificate with every trust engagement.
Signing the documents is the beginning, not the end. This checklist covers the implementation steps that complete a functional estate plan.
The NC Personal Property Memorandum is authorized by N.C.G.S. § 31-51.1. It must be signed and dated by the testator. It need not be witnessed or notarized, but it must be referenced in the will to be given effect. Ryan's will includes explicit language authorizing and incorporating any personal property memorandum the testator signs after the will's execution.
The NC HIPAA Authorization form complies with 45 C.F.R. § 164.508 (federal HIPAA requirements) and N.C.G.S. § 90-412 (NC medical records access). Ryan's form authorizes disclosure to named individuals and the healthcare POA agent.
For trust plans, NC real estate transfers into the trust require a deed prepared to recording standards for the specific county Register of Deeds. Ryan prepares deeds compliant with N.C.G.S. § 47-18 and coordinates recording with the county Register of Deeds.
South Carolina's tangible personal property memorandum is authorized under S.C. Code § 62-2-512. Like NC, SC allows a signed writing to direct specific tangible personal property if referenced in the will. Witnesses are not required, but the memorandum must be in the testator's handwriting or signed by the testator.
SC real estate transfers into trust require recording with the county Register of Deeds (same as NC). SC charges a deed transfer tax on most transfers, but transfers to a revocable trust by the same grantor qualify for a statutory exemption. Ryan includes the exemption language in every SC trust deed.
Every estate plan, regardless of complexity, benefits from a Letter of Instruction and HIPAA authorization. These two documents alone can dramatically simplify administration for your family.
If your estate plan includes a trust, deed preparation is critical. An untransferred property defeats the probate-avoidance goal of the entire trust plan.
Heirlooms, collections, vehicles, furniture — a Personal Property Memorandum directs these items cleanly without creating family conflict over who gets what.
A Digital Asset Memorandum is essential for anyone with cryptocurrency, online businesses, or significant digital accounts. It's the document that makes the RUFADAA language in your will actually usable.
HIPAA authorizations are especially critical for unmarried partners. Without one, a hospital may refuse to share medical information with the person most important to you.
Beneficiary designations on IRAs and 401(k)s override everything in your will. A beneficiary designation review — and written update instructions — prevents the most common estate planning failure.
Signing the will or trust is step one of implementation, not the last step. Trust funding, beneficiary designation updates, deed recording, and distribution of copies to agents and advisors all follow the signing. The ancillary documents — particularly the Letter of Instruction — should be completed within weeks of the will or trust signing.
A safe deposit box may require a court order to open after death — creating a catch-22 where the will needed to open the box is inside the box. NC allows voluntary filing of a will with the Clerk of Superior Court during the testator's lifetime. Alternatively, store the original with your attorney or in a home fireproof safe with instructions to the executor.
An IRA with an ex-spouse listed as beneficiary passes to that ex-spouse regardless of what the current will says — the beneficiary designation controls. Reviewing and updating all beneficiary designations (retirement accounts, life insurance, bank TOD designations) is the most commonly skipped implementation step.
A family left to administer an estate without a Letter of Instruction must locate accounts, insurance policies, and advisors from scratch — while grieving and under time pressure. A well-organized letter of instruction, updated periodically, can reduce estate settlement time by months and eliminate significant stress for the people you leave behind.
A personal property memorandum only has legal effect in NC and SC if the will explicitly references it. A memorandum prepared independently, without a corresponding will provision, may not be given effect by the executor. Ryan drafts every will with specific language authorizing and incorporating any personal property memorandum the testator prepares.
A Letter of Instruction is not legally binding — but it is often the single most practical document in an estate plan. It transforms a multi-month administration scramble into an organized process.
When you die, your executor or successor trustee faces a long list of immediate tasks: locating assets, contacting institutions, notifying parties, paying ongoing bills, accessing accounts, handling pets, planning the funeral, and dozens of other items — most of which involve information that exists only in your head. A well-organized Letter of Instruction can compress this discovery phase from months to days.
The letter is not a legal document. It does not need notarization or witnesses. It does not control asset distribution (your will or trust does that). But for the people you leave behind, it may be the most important document in your estate plan.
A complete Letter of Instruction includes the following sections at minimum:
The Letter of Instruction is a private document, but it can be stolen, lost, or seen by the wrong person. Do not include:
Store the Letter of Instruction with your other estate documents (or with your attorney). Provide a copy to your executor, successor trustee, and primary agents. Review and update annually — account numbers change, contacts move, preferences evolve. Date each version clearly so the most recent letter governs. Ryan provides a Letter of Instruction template as part of every estate plan engagement.