Estate planning for chiropractors in Georgia who own their practice, the office building, and a family home is not just about who inherits your assets.
It is about who has legal authority to act immediately when you die.
Most chiropractors believe they are covered because they have an LLC and a Will. In Georgia, that belief often fails when it matters most.
This guide explains, step by step, what chiropractors commonly believe, what actually happens under Georgia law, and how to properly structure an estate plan so your spouse can act immediately, sell assets, and avoid probate court delays.
Who This Article Is For
This article is written for Georgia chiropractors who:
- Own a primary residence
- Own a chiropractic practice
- Own the office building personally or through an LLC
- Are married with children
- Want everything to go to their spouse first
- Plan to sell the practice and property after death
- Want to avoid probate court, delays, and unnecessary legal fees
What Most Georgia Chiropractors Believe About Estate Planning
Many chiropractors start with reasonable assumptions based on incomplete information.
Common beliefs include:
- “I have an LLC, so my business avoids probate.”
- “I have a Will, so everything goes to my spouse anyway.”
- “My wife can just sell the building if something happens to me.”
- “Probate is only a problem if the kids fight.”
- “I will deal with this later.”
These beliefs are common. In Georgia, they are usually incorrect or incomplete.
What Probate Actually Is in Georgia
Probate is the court process required to transfer ownership of assets when someone dies.
If you die owning assets in your personal name, those assets must pass through probate unless they are structured to avoid it.
Probate applies to:
- Real estate in your personal name
- Bank and investment accounts in your personal name
- The ownership of your LLC if you personally own it
Probate is required even if there is no family conflict.
Misconceptions Chiropractors Have About Estate Planning
These are common misconceptions that the chiropractors we speak with have.
Misconception 1: “My LLC Keeps My Business Out of Probate”
Many chiropractors believe that because their practice operates through an LLC, probate does not apply.
The LLC itself does not go through probate.
The ownership of the LLC does.
If you personally own the LLC membership interest and you die:
- Your ownership of the LLC becomes part of your probate estate
- The probate court controls who can act
- A personal representative is appointed
During probate:
- The practice cannot be freely sold
- The office building owned by the LLC cannot be sold without court approval
- The business cannot be cleanly shut down
This is a major issue when the intent is to sell the practice or property.
Misconception 2: “A Will Avoids Probate If Everything Goes to My Spouse”
Many chiropractors believe a Will avoids probate because it names a spouse as beneficiary.
A Will does not avoid probate.
A Will only instructs the probate court on how assets should be distributed after probate is complete.
In Georgia:
- Probate is still required
- Assets are still frozen during probate
- Court oversight still applies
Even when everything goes to a spouse, probate must still occur.
Misconception 3: “My Spouse Can Just Sell the House or Building”
Many assume their spouse can sell property immediately after death.
During probate:
- Your spouse does not automatically have full authority
- The executor’s role is limited
- Major decisions often require court approval
This means:
- Selling the house may require court permission
- Selling the office building may require court permission
- Shutting down the practice is often delayed
Probate slows decisions at the worst possible time.
Misconception 4: “Probate Is Only a Problem If There Is Conflict”
Even when everyone agrees, probate still causes delay and cost.
In Georgia:
- Simple probate with an attorney often costs $5,000 to $15,000
- Probate involving businesses or multiple properties is usually considered complex
- Complex probate commonly costs $15,000 to $30,000 or more
These costs are paid by your estate. Your family bears the burden.
Why Chiropractors Face a Higher Risk Than Most Families
Chiropractors are uniquely exposed because they often own:
- An operating business
- Patient records and equipment
- A commercial office building
- Assets intended to be sold, not passed down
Probate is designed to transfer ownership slowly, not to wind down a business or sell commercial property efficiently.
This mismatch creates delays, legal costs, and stress for surviving spouses.
The Correct Way to Think About Estate Planning
Estate planning for Chiropractors is not about documents.
It is about control and timing.
Three questions matter more than anything else:
- Who controls assets while I am alive?
- Who controls them immediately when I die?
- Can my spouse act without court permission?
If the answer to question three is no, the plan is broken.
How a Joint Revocable Living Trust Solves the Problem
A joint revocable living trust is the most common solution for chiropractors in this situation.
How the Trust Works
- You and your spouse create one shared trust
- You both serve as trustees while living
- The trust becomes the legal owner of your assets
Assets typically transferred into the trust include:
- Your primary residence
- Your LLC membership interest
- Any personally owned real estate
Learn More: Cost of a Revocable Trust
What Happens When One Spouse Dies With a Trust in Place
If you die first:
- Your spouse becomes the sole trustee
- No probate is required
- No court approval is needed
Your spouse can immediately:
- Sell the house
- Sell the office building
- Shut down the chiropractic practice
- Use trust assets for living or healthcare expenses
- Decide when and how children inherit
Everything happens privately and without delay.
Why the LLC Still Matters Even With a Trust
The LLC and the trust serve different purposes.
- The LLC holds the business operations and limits liability
- The trust owns the LLC membership interest
This structure:
- Keeps the business out of probate
- Allows immediate control by the surviving spouse
- Supports a clean sale of assets
The trust controls succession. The LLC controls operations.
What a Complete Chiropractor Estate Plan Includes
A complete Georgia chiropractor estate plan typically includes:
- Joint Revocable Living Trust
- Pour-Over Will for each spouse
- Financial Power of Attorney
- Healthcare Directive
- HIPAA Authorization
Asset transfers include:
- Deeding the primary residence into the trust
- Assigning LLC ownership into the trust
- Transferring any personally owned real estate into the trust
Why the Will Is Still Necessary
The Will acts as a safety net.
If you forget to transfer an asset into the trust later in life, the Will directs it into the trust after probate.
This prevents partial or broken plans.
A Simple End-to-End Example
If you die tomorrow with this structure in place:
- Your spouse takes full legal control immediately
- Probate court is not involved
- The practice can be shut down
- The building can be sold
- Sale proceeds stay inside the trust
- Children inherit later according to your instructions
No delays. No court supervision. No confusion.