The Law Offices of Stephanie A Cruz, P.A

The Law Offices of Stephanie A Cruz, P.A Real Estate, Wills & Trusts, Guardianship and Probate legal matters.

04/09/2026
02/25/2026

Let me finish that story properly, because this is where most families make the mistake.

Mark and Linda thought a will was enough. It was not.

In Florida, if you leave your house to your children through a will, that property must go through probate. Probate is not just paperwork. It is a court supervised process. It takes time. It costs money. It is public record. And during that time, your kids cannot simply sell, refinance, or easily manage the property.

Now add reality:

• Court filing fees
• Attorney fees
• Mandatory notices to creditors
• Possible delays if someone contests
• Months, sometimes over a year, before everything clears

All of that stress hits your children while they are grieving.

Here is the simple change that saved them: a revocable living trust.

Instead of leaving the house through a will, they transferred the home into a properly drafted trust while they were alive. The trust named them as trustees during their lifetime and named their children as successor beneficiaries.

What changed?

• No probate for the house
• No public court file
• Immediate control by the successor trustee
• Faster, smoother transfer

Same goal. Completely different outcome.

A will controls assets that must go through court. A trust controls assets privately.

If your estate plan is just a will and you own real property in Florida, you need to understand that your family will likely deal with probate. That may be acceptable to you. But do not pretend it will be simple or automatic.

The difference between legal headaches and a smooth transition often comes down to one structural decision made in advance.

If you own a home and want it to transfer cleanly, you need to look at how it is titled, not just what your will says.

02/18/2026

When they came to my office, we discussed a far better solution: a Special Needs Trust.

This type of trust allowed them to:

• Provide financial support for Ethan
• Preserve his eligibility for government benefits
• Appoint a trusted trustee to manage the funds
• Ensure the money was used to enhance his quality of life

That means covering things like additional therapies, assistive technology, specialized equipment, transportation, or improved housing. Expenses that improve life, without disqualifying him from essential benefits.

Think of the trust as a protective shield. It separates the inheritance from Ethan’s personal assets so it does not count against benefit eligibility limits.

Now ask yourself: what did they actually avoid?

If Sarah and David had left Ethan an inheritance outright, the money could have disqualified him from needs based benefits such as Medicaid or Supplemental Security Income. He would have had to spend down the inheritance just to requalify. That means burning through funds on basic care instead of preserving them to enhance his life.

Worse, during that spend down period, he could have lost critical medical coverage, housing assistance, and daily support services.

Instead, they now have certainty. Their assets will supplement his care, not replace or jeopardize it.

Here is the bottom line for viewers. If you have a child with disabilities, this is not optional planning. A well intentioned gift or inheritance given the wrong way can cause serious harm. The solution is clear, but it must be structured properly under Florida law.

If you want to protect your child long term, this conversation needs to happen sooner, not later.

02/16/2026

A few years ago, I met a family whose story is a powerful reminder of why planning ahead matters, especially when it comes to avoiding a painful guardianship battle.

Let’s call them Maria and James. They were in their late 40s, living in Florida, raising two kids, 12 and 15, and helping care for James’ mother, who had early stage Alzheimer’s. Life was full, busy, and like many families, they kept saying they would handle estate planning later.

Then everything changed.

Maria was in a car accident. She survived, but her injuries left her temporarily unable to manage her finances or make medical decisions. That is when the real problem started.

Because Maria had not signed the proper planning documents, James could not automatically step in to act on her behalf. The bank accounts were in her name. The hospital would not follow his direction without legal authority. Being a spouse was not enough.

So what was the only option? A formal guardianship case through the court. That meant hiring attorneys, paying court fees, attending hearings, and waiting for judicial approval, all during one of the most stressful times of their lives.

And here is the key point. The law does not automatically assume that because you are family, you have the legal right to handle someone’s finances or make binding decisions about their assets. Without proper documents in place, even a devoted spouse may be forced into court.

This situation could have been avoided with proactive planning. Guardianship should be a last resort, not the first solution. If you have questions about how to protect your family and avoid unnecessary court involvement, reach out and schedule a consultation.

02/10/2026

What can you do to actually protect your family and your business? You need a succession plan. That’s non negotiable.

Step one is deciding who will take over and how that transition will happen. If you do not choose, the law or the court will. And you will not like that outcome.

Second, use a revocable living trust. You can place your business assets or ownership interests into the trust so they transfer immediately to your chosen successors upon your death. No probate delays. No operational freeze. The business keeps running.

Third, if your business has multiple owners, you need a buy sell agreement. This document controls what happens to your ownership if you pass away, retire, or become incapacitated. It keeps the business in capable hands and ensures your family receives fair value instead of chaos.

Fourth, plan for liquidity. Life insurance is often the cleanest solution. It can cover estate expenses, taxes, or fund a buyout without forcing a fire sale of business assets.

Finally, review your operating agreement or corporate documents. Outdated paperwork creates contradictions. Contradictions lead to lawsuits. Lawsuits destroy businesses.

I worked with a Florida client who owned a family restaurant. She wanted her daughter to run the business, but she wanted her two sons to benefit financially without being involved day to day. Through a properly structured living trust and a buy sell agreement funded by life insurance, we gave her daughter full operational control while her sons received fair value.

No fights. No delays. No court involvement.
The restaurant is still thriving.

02/06/2026

I want to share a story that truly breaks my heart, but also shows how a few smart legal steps can completely change a child’s future.

Let’s call them Sarah and David. They live in Florida with their eight-year-old son, Ethan, who has special needs and relies on SSI for critical support. Like many parents, they worked hard and saved a modest nest egg to make sure Ethan would be financially secure when they were gone.

They did what they thought was right. They created a simple will and named Ethan as the direct beneficiary.

On paper, it looked responsible. In reality, it could have cost Ethan everything.

Here’s what they didn’t know. If Ethan were to inherit money directly, even a few thousand dollars over $2,000, he could lose his SSI eligibility. Those benefits are not just a monthly check. They cover therapies, medications, medical care, and long-term support. Without SSI, the financial burden could follow him for the rest of his life.

Worse, once those inherited funds were spent, his benefits would not automatically restart. He would be forced back into a long, uncertain reapplication process with no guarantee of immediate approval.

By leaving the money directly to Ethan, Sarah and David were unintentionally putting his entire safety net at risk.

This is exactly why families with special needs children need a special needs trust. Not to withhold support, but to protect it. The right planning allows you to provide for your child without sacrificing the benefits they depend on.

Estate planning is not about good intentions. It’s about understanding the consequences of every decision.

If you have a child with special needs and want to protect their future the right way here in Florida, message me. One smart step can make all the difference.

02/04/2026

If you own a family business, you already know it’s more than income.
It’s your legacy. Your leverage. Your family’s future.
But here’s the uncomfortable truth.
Without the right estate plan, everything you built can unravel the moment you’re gone.
I see this happen all the time in Florida.
A profitable business is suddenly frozen because there was no plan.
Family members start fighting.
Decisions stall.
The business loses value.
Years of work begin to collapse.
And here’s what most owners don’t realize.
If you pass away without a clear plan, Florida’s intestacy laws step in.
The state decides who inherits. Not you.
Inheritance does not equal leadership.
And it definitely does not equal competence.
Without proper planning, three major problems show up fast:
• No succession plan. No clear successor means chaos at the top.
• Ownership disputes. Multiple heirs, different goals, zero alignment.
• Liquidity problems. Taxes and expenses force heirs to sell assets or the business itself.
Add probate to the mix, and your business can be tied up for months or even years.
Operations slow. Contracts suffer. Employees leave. Value drops.
A business doesn’t fail overnight.
It fails because no one planned for the handoff.
If you own a business in Florida and care about what happens to it after you’re gone, send me a message.
We’ll build a plan that protects your business, your family, and the legacy you worked for.

02/02/2026

Many clients ask me this question.
“I own property in Florida, but I also own property in another state. What happens when I pass away?”

Here’s the reality.
If that out-of-state property is not properly incorporated into your estate plan, your heirs are looking at multiple probates.

Not just probate in Florida.
Probate in Florida and an additional probate in the other state where the property is located. That second process is called an ancillary probate.

This is where people get blindsided.

Even if you did everything right in Florida, failing to plan for property in another state creates extra court proceedings, extra attorneys, extra delays, and extra costs. It is far more complicated than owning multiple properties within one state.

The key issue is coordination.
Every property you own, regardless of location, needs to be intentionally addressed in your estate plan. Otherwise, your heirs inherit a legal mess instead of a clean transfer.

If you own property outside of Florida, even just one, you need to talk to an attorney about how to avoid Florida probate and ancillary probate in other states.

This is fixable.
But only if it’s handled proactively, not after the fact.

If this applies to you, reach out and we’ll go over your options the right way.

01/30/2026

Are your beneficiary designations actually clear?

Here’s something you can do right now. No lawyer required. About 30 minutes of your time.

Go to the bank where you hold your accounts and ask to add a beneficiary designation. If you are not ready to do full estate planning yet, this is still a smart move.

Why does this matter? If your bank account is only in your name and you pass away, that money will go through probate. The bank cannot release the funds because they have no legal direction on who should receive them.

A beneficiary designation solves that. Once it’s in place, the bank can release the funds directly to the people you name. No court involvement. No delays.

A few important rules:
• The beneficiary must be over 18
• You usually cannot list a large number of people, but one to three is typically allowed
• This applies to bank accounts, not just investment accounts

This is one of the simplest ways to make sure your money moves quickly and cleanly to the right people.

It’s not a replacement for estate planning. But it’s far better than doing nothing.

01/26/2026

Did you know creditors get a window to collect during probate? That window is not small, and it’s not optional.

When someone passes away owing money, probate becomes open season for creditors. Credit cards, medical bills, personal loans, all of them can file claims against the estate before heirs see a single dollar.

This is one of the biggest reasons we work to avoid probate whenever possible.

Proper estate planning does more than make things easier for your family. It can reduce delays, limit exposure, and in many cases prevent assets from being unnecessarily drained by creditor claims.

You worked hard for your money. Letting it disappear because of poor planning is avoidable.

If you want to protect your assets and pass them on the right way, send me a message. We’ll build a plan that actually does its job.

01/23/2026

If you’ve remarried and you still have an old will or trust, you need to update your estate plan. Period.

Life changes break outdated documents. Remarriage, divorce, new children, stepchildren, or even becoming single again all create legal conflicts if your estate plan does not match your current reality.

Old documents plus a new life equals chaos. Conflicting beneficiaries. Unintended inheritances. Family disputes. Court involvement that could have been avoided.

Estate planning is not a one-and-done task. Your will, trust, powers of attorney, and healthcare directives must stay current or they can work against you instead of protecting you.

If you are unsure whether your documents still reflect your life, that uncertainty is already your answer.

Call me. I’ll review what you have, tell you exactly what needs to change, and make sure your estate plan actually works when it matters.

Address

14100 Palmetto Frontage Road Suite 100
Miami Lakes, FL
33016

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 5pm
Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Wednesday 9am - 5pm
Thursday 9am - 5pm
Friday 9am - 5pm

Telephone

+13056986565

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