EP Wealth's Regional Director, Ryan Caldwell, CFP®, shares a step-by-step approach to managing finances after the death of a spouse or loved one, from settling accounts to avoiding common mistakes.
After a spouse or loved one passes away, you may find yourself facing a situation where there's an enormous amount to do and very little clarity about where to start. There are accounts to locate, institutions to notify, and decisions to make about debts, assets, and distributions. And all of it arrives during a time when you feel the least equipped to handle it.
As a financial advisor at EP Wealth, the first thing I tell clients in this situation is to slow down. Grieve. Be present. Try to get rest, lean on the people around you, and give yourself permission to not have everything figured out right away. The financial steps can wait a couple of weeks, and they should — because an emotional state is the worst state from which to make big financial decisions.
When you are ready to begin, having a framework for what comes next can help bring some order to an otherwise overwhelming time. In this blog, I walk through the process I guide clients through, including:
A financial advisor can act as a “project manager” throughout this process, coordinating with the attorney and CPA, and translating legal language into plain terms you can understand. Your advisor can also help keep the estate attorney, who is often managing multiple matters at once, accountable and on schedule so you don't have to.
I can't stress this enough: don't rush. When someone close to you dies, there is an enormous amount to process. There are people to notify, services to arrange, and — if you're a surviving spouse or the person responsible for the estate — a long list of financial and legal matters waiting for your attention.
All of that can feel urgent, but very little of it needs to happen in the first week or two. The decisions you make during this time will have long-term consequences, and making them while you're emotionally exhausted increases the risk of mistakes that could have been avoided.
So, take care of yourself first. Get sleep. Drink water. Accept help when it's offered. The financial work will still be there when you're ready for it, and you'll be in a better position to handle it once you've had some time to grieve.
Even with the best intentions, it's possible for surviving family members to stumble during this process. Here are some issues I’ve seen come up repeatedly over the years:
In the wake of a loss, well-meaning people often come out of the woodwork with advice. Friends, family members, acquaintances — everyone has an opinion about what you should do. The problem is that much of this advice can be conflicting, and if the person offering it isn't qualified to give financial or legal guidance, it can lead you in the wrong direction.
My recommendation: thank people for their concern, and then find one trusted advisor — ideally an estate planning attorney or the professional who drafted the estate documents — and commit to following that person's guidance. Try to tune out the rest of the noise.
There is no requirement to wrap everything up in a short amount of time. You have time to be methodical. Rushing can lead to costly errors — for example, unnecessarily paying debts that may have been charged off at death, or triggering tax consequences that could have been avoided with more careful planning. Being deliberate about each step, rather than trying to get through everything as fast as possible, tends to lead to better outcomes.
One shortcut I've seen people take is transferring money out of a deceased person's bank account into a linked account, rather than going through the process of changing the account title. It might seem easier in the moment, but it can create problems down the line. That original account is still open, and it may generate interest, produce a 1099 tax form the following year, and become a lingering administrative headache. The better approach, even though it takes more effort, is to work through each account properly and get the title changed.
The process of settling a loved one's financial affairs generally follows a sequence, though the specifics will vary depending on the complexity of the estate. Here's the general order I walk clients through.
This is the first practical step, and it's important to do it early because certified copies of death certificates can take a couple of weeks to arrive. You'll need them for nearly everything that follows, such as changing account titles at banks, notifying financial institutions, and accessing accounts held in a trust.
I typically recommend ordering 10 to 15 certified copies at a minimum, and more if the deceased had a large number of accounts. Death certificates are usually ordered through the funeral home, though the process can vary by location.
Before you start digging into the details, it helps to have a trusted advisor in place, whether that's an estate planning attorney, a financial advisor, or both. As I mentioned earlier, one of the most common mistakes I see is people trying to act on advice coming from too many directions at once. Having one trusted professional guiding the process early on helps you avoid missteps and gives you a clearer sense of what to prioritize.
This is especially true because the steps that follow — from retitling accounts to addressing debts — each involve decisions that can have long-term financial and tax implications.
This is what I call the "treasure hunt." Hopefully, the deceased was organized and left behind a clear record of their accounts, documents, and obligations. Some people use a tool like a Nokbox — a "Next of Kin" box that's designed to organize financial and personal information for heirs. If something like that is in place, this step can be relatively straightforward.
If not, you may need to search for information across a range of areas, including:
One useful starting point is the mail: incoming statements and bills can help you piece together where the accounts and liabilities are.
This step is often the most time-consuming part of the process. It involves going to each financial institution with a death certificate — and trust documents, if applicable — to change the ownership on accounts. If the account was held in a trust, you'll typically need to present the trust document and identify yourself as the successor or surviving trustee. If it wasn't in a trust, court documents may be required to re-register the account.
I always encourage people to work toward consolidating inherited assets into one account, typically in the name of the estate or the trust. Having one central account makes everything that follows, such as paying debts, making distributions, and tracking tax obligations, much more manageable.
Before paying any of the deceased's debts, consult with an attorney. Some debts may be charged off at death, and paying them prematurely could mean spending money you didn't need to spend.
One concern I hear frequently from clients is the fear that they'll inherit a parent's debt. That's not how it works — you cannot inherit debt from a parent. If the estate doesn't have the resources to cover the obligation, the creditor typically absorbs the loss.
For surviving spouses, however, the situation can be different. A spouse may be a joint account holder on credit cards, a cosigner on loans, or a co-holder on a mortgage. In those cases, the surviving spouse may remain responsible for the obligation. Community property laws, which vary by state, can also affect which debts carry over, so getting state-specific legal advice is important.
Not every asset needs to be sold. In some cases, it may make more sense to distribute property — whether that's real estate or an investment portfolio — directly to beneficiaries rather than liquidating it first. A financial advisor can help evaluate which approach may be more appropriate based on the circumstances.
Once debts have been addressed and the attorney confirms the estate is clear, distributions to beneficiaries can begin. This is the final stage of the process, and it marks the point where the estate can be formally closed.
I often describe my role in this process as a project manager. When a client loses a spouse or a parent, there are usually multiple professionals involved — an estate attorney, a CPA, sometimes other specialists. My job is to see the full picture, coordinate across all of those parties, and keep the process moving forward.
The estate planning attorney is often the central figure in the settlement process, particularly for larger or more complex estates. They guide the legal steps, from interpreting the trust or will to navigating court proceedings if necessary.
A financial advisor who is overseeing the process can serve as a bridge between the client and the attorney. That might mean following up on outstanding items, asking the right questions, or helping move things along when the attorney's attention is pulled in other directions. For someone who is grieving, not having to be the one chasing down updates or pushing for next steps can be a meaningful relief.
I also spend a lot of time translating. Clients will come to me after a two-hour meeting with their attorney and say, "I don't even know what they told me." My job in those moments is to break it down into plain language — here are the five things you actually need to understand from that conversation, and here's what they mean for you.
A CPA or tax preparer also plays an important role. This is especially true when a trust needs to be split into sub-trusts after one of the grantors passes away. Splitting a trust can involve creating a new tax ID, deciding which assets go into which trust, and coordinating the funding of those new entities. The financial advisor, attorney, and CPA typically work closely together during this phase to determine how the allocation should look.
Beyond the logistics, I think there's real value in simply having someone in your corner who can provide calm when everything feels chaotic. That's always my goal: how can I help this person feel less overwhelmed and more supported during one of the hardest experiences of their life?
The steps above describe what happens after a loss. But there are things individuals and couples can do now to make the process significantly smoother for their heirs and surviving family members.
For individuals with significant assets, working with an estate planning attorney to draft a full set of documents is an important step. This typically includes a trust, a will, powers of attorney, and advanced healthcare directives. These documents provide the legal framework for how your assets will be managed and distributed, and they can help your heirs avoid the lengthy and costly probate process.
This is one of the most common oversights I see, and it's worth calling out on its own. Clients will go through the effort and expense of working with an attorney to create a trust — and then never transfer their assets into it. A trust that isn't funded (that is, one where the accounts and property haven't been retitled into the trust's name) may not accomplish what it was designed to do. Your heirs could still end up going through probate, which is exactly what the trust was meant to help them avoid.
One of the most helpful things you can do for your loved ones is to organize your financial information in a way that's easy for them to find and follow. There are a number of "next of kin" organizer tools available that are designed for exactly this purpose — pre-organized filing systems that hold everything a successor or heir would need, from bank and investment account details to estate documents, insurance policies, credit card information, utility and subscription accounts, passwords, and even personal obligations like pet care or volunteer commitments.
I've personally worked with surviving spouses where none of this organizational work had been done ahead of time. We didn't know where the bank accounts were, which credit cards were active, or which cards were linked to which household bills. It took significant forensic accounting just to get to a baseline understanding of the full financial picture. That kind of experience is stressful for everyone involved, and it's largely avoidable with a little preparation.
Managing a loved one's financial affairs while you're grieving is a heavy burden, and even the best preparation won't change that entirely. But taking things one step at a time, and leaning on trusted people for support, can make it more manageable.
If there's one message I'd want readers to take from this blog, it's this: get help, take your time, and give yourself grace. You don't have to figure everything out at once, and you don't have to do it alone.
At EP Wealth, our financial advisors can help guide you and your family through this process, step by step. If you're facing this situation now — or if you'd like to take proactive steps to prepare — we're here to help.
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