The Family Guide
Plan Your Passing: The Family Guide
30 chapters. 90,294 words. Every angle. From the conversation you have been avoiding to the day it is all finally done. Written by a licensed realtor who has been in the room when families fall apart and seen what keeps them together.
First 10,000 founding members get permanent free access to the full book online plus the audiobook plus a downloadable PDF. No catch.
Three formats
Read it. Listen to it. Download it.
Read online
Full chapter-by-chapter web reader with hyperlinked tools, hero images, and reading progress tracking.
Open the reader →Listen anywhere
Narrated chapter audio. Subscribe via podcast feed for Apple Podcasts and Spotify, or download the M4B audiobook for any audiobook player.
Podcast feed →Download
Print-ready PDF of the entire book. Perfect for marking up, sharing with family, or reading offline. Founding members and buyers get the download.
Get the PDF →Chapters
30 chapters, every angle
- CH 1The Conversation You've Been Avoiding
- CH 2What a Will Actually Does (and Doesn't Do)
- CH 3Trusts Explained Without the Jargon
- CH 4The Power of Attorney — Name Someone Now
- CH 5Beneficiary Designations — The Trap Nobody Warns You About
- CH 6The House — Your Family's Most Complicated Asset
- CH 7Retirement Accounts and Investments
- CH 8Personal Property and Sentimental Items
- CH 9Digital Assets — What Happens to Your Online Life
- CH 10Business Interests and Intellectual Property
- CH 11The First 24 Hours After a Death
- CH 12The Executor's Job — What It Actually Involves
Founding 10,000 Members
Two paths to the full book.
Free for founding members forever, or buy lifetime access for $19.99. Same content either way.
Plan Your Passing is not a law firm. The information on this site is for general educational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, tax, medical, or professional advice. No attorney-client relationship is created by reading this site or using any tool on it. Estate, probate, tax, and inheritance laws differ by country, state, province, county, and individual circumstance, and they change over time. You are solely responsible for confirming the laws that apply to you. Always consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction before making any legal, financial, or tax decision regarding wills, trusts, beneficiaries, probate, real estate transfers, gifts, or end-of-life directives. The author, operators, and affiliates of this site disclaim all liability for actions taken or not taken based on its contents.