The Details That Make or Break Your Financial Plan

Asset registration — how your bank accounts, investment accounts, real estate, and other assets are titled — is one of the most frequently overlooked yet consequential elements of financial planning. Incorrect titling can cause assets to pass to the wrong person, trigger unnecessary probate proceedings, create unintended tax consequences, or undermine your estate plan entirely.

At Financial Planning Hawaii, we conduct a detailed review of how every significant asset is registered. We compare your actual titling against your estate plan, beneficiary designations, and financial goals to identify discrepancies and recommend corrections.

Common Titling Issues We Discover

In our 30+ years of experience, we routinely find titling errors that could have serious consequences if left unaddressed. Common issues include assets held individually that should be in a trust, outdated titling from before a marriage or divorce, accounts without transfer-on-death designations, and real estate titled in ways that create unnecessary tax exposure.

State-Specific Considerations in Hawaii

Hawaii is not a community property state but does recognize tenancy by the entirety for married couples, which offers creditor protection benefits. We ensure your asset titling takes advantage of available state-law protections while remaining consistent with your overall estate plan.

A Frequent and Costly Oversight

Over 80% of new clients we review have at least one significant asset registration issue. The most common: a trust exists on paper, but the assets were never actually retitled into the trust.

30+
Years Reviewing Asset Registrations
20+
Findings Per Client Review
80%+
Of Clients Have at Least One Titling Issue
100%
Of Assets Reviewed for Consistency
What We Cover

What Our Asset Registration Review Covers

We examine the titling of every significant asset against your estate plan, tax situation, and protection goals.

Bank & Investment Accounts

We verify that all financial accounts are titled correctly — individual, joint, trust, TOD/POD — and aligned with your estate plan.

Real Estate Titling

We review how your properties are titled and whether the form of ownership (sole, joint, trust, LLC) is optimal for your goals.

Retirement Account Registration

We verify that retirement accounts designate the correct beneficiaries and are structured for tax-efficient transfer.

Creditor Protection Analysis

We evaluate whether your current titling provides appropriate creditor protection, including tenancy by the entirety benefits in Hawaii.

Trust Funding Verification

For clients with trusts, we verify that assets intended for the trust have actually been retitled into the trust — a step that is frequently missed.

Consistency Audit

We cross-reference all titling against your will, trust, beneficiary designations, and powers of attorney to identify conflicts.

How It Works

Our Review Process

 
1

Document Collection

We gather account statements, property deeds, and registration details for all significant assets.

2

Titling Inventory

We create a complete inventory of how every asset is currently titled.

3

Alignment Analysis

We compare actual titling against your estate plan, beneficiary designations, and financial goals.

4

Findings Report

You receive a clear summary of any discrepancies with specific recommendations for correction.

5

Implementation Support

We help you work with financial institutions, title companies, and attorneys to implement necessary changes.

Asset Registration Checklist

Review your current asset registration status:

 

All bank accounts titled consistently with estate plan

 

Investment accounts include appropriate TOD/beneficiary designations

 

Real estate titled in the correct ownership form

 

Trust-intended assets actually retitled into the trust

 

Retirement account beneficiaries current and correct

 

No assets titled in a way that bypasses your estate plan

 

Creditor protection considerations addressed in titling

 

Complete asset registration reviewed within the last 3 years

Common Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

Get answers to common questions about our asset registration review services.

Why does asset titling matter?
How an asset is titled determines who it passes to at death, whether it goes through probate, what tax treatment it receives, and what creditor protection it has. A single titling error can undermine your entire estate plan.
What is the most common titling mistake you find?
The most common mistake is clients who have established a trust but never retitled their assets into the trust. This effectively renders the trust useless for probate avoidance — the asset passes according to the will (or intestacy laws) rather than the trust provisions.
How does Hawaii law affect asset titling?
Hawaii recognizes tenancy by the entirety for married couples, which provides significant creditor protection — assets held this way cannot be reached by creditors of only one spouse. We ensure clients take advantage of this protection where appropriate.
How often should I review my asset registrations?
At minimum every 3-5 years, and after any major life event — marriage, divorce, death of a spouse, purchase of new property, opening new accounts, or establishing or updating a trust.
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