STEP tells Will buyers to beware!
STEP Concerns
Some 12 years on from their first published research, the Society of Trust and Estate Practitioners (STEP) has published a new report – ‘Wills and Trusts – Buyers Beware. The respected organization has long been concerned that unqualified or simply incompetent advisers are intentionally or unintentionally taking advantage of clients or letting them down because of their lack of the specialist skill of knowledge. STEP is consistently ‘receiving complaints from people whose loved ones have inadvertently chosen wills that mean substantial parts of their estates are spent on legal fees’.
Situation not improving
Sadly, the research STEP conducted with its members between April and May 2023 suggests the situation has not improved, with a high percentage of those surveyed still reporting regularly coming across or having to unravel bad practices. Some of the shocking, if not surprising highlights are summarised below.
Common problems
- Close to 80% of respondents have come across cases of wills with errors.
- The majority, (63%) have encountered cases where a will writing company has quoted a fee for writing a will but later added additional costs not covered within the terms of business.
- Over half (55%) had come across cases of incompetence or dishonesty in the drafting and administration of trusts.
- Again, just over half of those surveyed (54%) have come across firms making false claims about the wills they are selling to clients. Of those, 71 people mentioned that advisors had wrongly told their clients that they could avoid care home fees by putting their home and other assets into a trust during their lifetime. Some clients have been advised to gift their house during their lifetime. Both of these, as any sensible practitioner would know, are considered to be deliberate deprivation of assets and thus ineffective for care assessment which can lead to serious problems.
- Sadly, a third of respondents had come across cases where incompetence has led to significant tax bills, with examples of tax charges in many instances in the tens or hundreds of thousands of pounds and in a few cases up to £2 million.
FB Wealth perspective
From our standpoint, whilst we absolutely recognize the problems the STEP research highlights, it is happily a non-issue. Why? Because all our highly qualified financial planners, only wish to work closely with solicitors for mutual clients ongoing wellbeing, and, as such, will only refer clients to specialist solicitors to ensure any Will, LPA or even trust, is correctly worded and ties in with their clients’ financial plans and succession wishes.
Not all financial advisers are financial planners
However, in financial services, as in legal services, not all advisers are equal or indeed the same. The modern financial planner, (perhaps a subject for another blog,) is very different from a transactional financial adviser. It is unlikely that a true financial planner would leave a client to their own devices when in need of a will or trust because such tools, as with LPAs, are vital to underpin the established plan. However, the more transactional financial adviser, even if independent, might be more inclined to try and supplement their income by referring clients to non-regulated legal advisers, or will-writing services.
Due Diligence vital
It is because of this that when an SRA regulated firm, conducts research or reviews the third-party firms that it will be referring to, remembering that the regulator expects a firm-wide process for this, that the above discrepancy and factors, are part of the due diligence process. In a practical sense this should be a simple as asking the financial advisory firm directly whether they ask if their clients have a Will, and how and where they will look to refer them if they do not. It will also often be quite clear on an IFA website if there are offering their own will-writing service or suggest that there are linked to one. We sincerely hope that you would not wish to include such a financial services firm, among your approved third parties.
Professional collaboration is key
As more wills in the UK are being contested than ever, the STEP research, and obvious renewed call for will-writing to be regulated, show that it has never been more important for clients to seek qualified professional advice, and better still collaborative, qualified professional advice.
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