Real estate is often the center of the plan.
Utah families may hold a primary home, rentals, inherited land, or property in more than one county. Ownership and beneficiary details need to line up.
Utah estate and business counsel
Curry Andrews helps Utah families, business owners, trustees, and property holders turn complicated assets into clear instructions, funded trusts, and practical next steps.
Planning around Utah realities
The risk is rarely one document
A will, trust, deed, LLC filing, insurance beneficiary, and family conversation can all point in different directions. That is where delay, conflict, probate, and expensive clean-up work begin.
Utah families may hold a primary home, rentals, inherited land, or property in more than one county. Ownership and beneficiary details need to line up.
Operating agreements, records, signatures, and succession language can matter when a partner dies, sells, divorces, or steps away.
Funding, titles, beneficiary designations, trustee instructions, and practical administration steps keep the plan from becoming a binder on a shelf.
A Utah-first planning method
Curry practices exclusively in estate and business law, which is important when a family plan touches real estate, closely held companies, trustee duties, inherited assets, and long-term control.
Family roles, Utah property, business interests, debt, retirement accounts, and likely decision points are reviewed as one picture.
You see what a will, trust, LLC update, asset transfer, or administration step actually solves before anything is drafted.
Documents are paired with practical next steps so trustees, agents, owners, and family members know what happens next.
Services for Utah clients
Choose the pressure point you are facing now. Curry will help connect the related pieces so your plan is practical, current, and administrable.
Make the next decision easier for your family.
Revocable trusts, wills, powers of attorney, health care directives, guardian choices, and trust funding guidance built around Utah property and family dynamics.
Keep ownership, control, and succession clear.
Formation, operating agreements, owner records, contracts, resolutions, buy-sell planning, and governance support for Utah companies and family ventures.
Reduce avoidable exposure before trouble starts.
Coordinated planning for homes, rentals, companies, inherited assets, savings, and family wealth so the legal structure matches the real risk.
Help fiduciaries move carefully and confidently.
Guidance for personal representatives, trustees, heirs, and families handling Utah probate, trust notices, accountings, distributions, and disputes.
How planning works
Maybe it is a parent, a rental, a company, a blended family, or an old trust. The first conversation focuses on the issue that made you reach out.
You will know which deeds, entity records, beneficiary designations, prior documents, and family details are actually useful for the review.
Curry explains what can wait, what should be handled now, and which structure gives you the cleanest result for the risk.
The work ends with clear signing steps, funding guidance, and instructions for keeping the plan current as Utah life changes.
Why clients call Curry
Curry has prepared more than 2,000 estate plans, organized several hundred businesses, and worked with clients whose planning needs cross family, property, ownership, and fiduciary lines.
Practices exclusively in estate and business law.
He listens and cares very much for his clients.
Curry Andrews is an extremely intelligent, creative and ethical professional.
Common concerns
You will understand the scope before moving forward. The goal is to match the plan to the risk, not sell documents or updates you do not need.
The process starts with a focused consultation, then Curry tells you which records are needed and which steps can be handled remotely.
Forms can miss Utah signing, funding, deed, entity, fiduciary, and administration issues that matter when someone actually has to use the plan.
Complicated is exactly when coordinated estate and business planning matters most. You will get practical options in plain English.
Free consultation
Ask about a Utah trust, an aging parent, a rental property, an LLC, probate, a trustee role, or the estate plan you have been meaning to update.
FAQ
It depends on your property, family structure, privacy goals, and whether avoiding probate matters to you. Curry can explain the tradeoffs and recommend the simplest plan that still protects you.
Yes. His planning work includes families, entrepreneurs, trustees, property owners, and business owners who need estate, asset, and company issues handled together.
Many owners need more than a state filing. Operating agreements, minutes, resolutions, contracts, ownership records, and annual compliance steps can all matter.
Yes. Curry offers office, home, and online meeting options when appropriate, so geography does not have to stall the plan.
Bring a list of major assets, business entities, Utah real estate, family decision makers, existing documents, and any deadline or concern that is keeping you up.
A plan may need review after marriage, divorce, death, a new child, a move, new property, a business change, or several years without updates.