The #1 Estate Planning Mistake That Breaks Minnesota Farm Succession Plans

Most Minnesota farmers believe that once they’ve signed a will or trust, their estate plan is finished.

Unfortunately, that assumption is exactly why so many farm succession plans fail—often at the worst possible time.

The truth is this: estate plans don’t break because of bad documents. They break because the authority doesn’t match the assets. And when that happens, even a well-written will or trust may do nothing to protect the farm.

Why Farm Estate Plans Really Fail

From our experience working with Minnesota farm families for decades, the problem is rarely the paperwork itself. The problem is what happens after the documents are signed.

Farmers often:

  • Sign a trust, will, and power of attorney
  • Assume everything is “handled”
  • Never follow through on aligning ownership and beneficiary designations

But documents do not control assets—ownership does. If the trust doesn’t actually own or control the asset, it cannot distribute it the way you intended.

That gap is where succession plans unravel.

Trusts Only Work If They’re Funded

A trust that doesn’t own anything is just paper.

For example:

  • If farmland is still titled in your individual name, the trust can’t control it
  • If a contract for deed isn’t disclosed, that real estate may be excluded
  • If newly purchased property isn’t titled correctly, it may bypass the plan

This is especially common with:

  • Contract-for-deed sales (you still own the property until paid in full)
  • Recently purchased land
  • Partial interests inherited with siblings
  • Mineral rights or overlooked parcels

If these assets aren’t properly connected to the trust, your farm can still end up in probate, even if you thought you planned around it.

Bank Accounts Can Be a Hidden Risk

Many farmers underestimate how critical bank accounts are in an estate plan.

At certain times of the year, a farm checking account may hold hundreds of thousands of dollars. Without proper pay-on-death (POD) designations or trust alignment, that money may:

  • Be frozen at death
  • Fall outside the trust
  • Create unnecessary court involvement
  • Disrupt ongoing farm operations

Simple steps, like properly designating a trust as beneficiary, can prevent major administrative delays and expenses.

Powers of Attorney Must Match Real Farm Decisions

Another common failure point is the power of attorney.

Many standard powers of attorney only authorize basic tasks like paying bills. For farmers, that’s not enough.

A proper farm power of attorney should clearly authorize:

  • Real estate transactions
  • Business operations
  • Trust transactions
  • Gifting strategies
  • Tax planning decisions

Without those powers, your family may be forced into court just to keep the farm running if you become incapacitated.

Three Questions Every Minnesota Farmer Should Ask

If you can’t confidently answer “yes” to all three, your plan likely needs review:

  1. Have I identified every asset I own? (Including contracts for deed, inherited interests, mineral rights, and recent purchases.)
  2. Does my power of attorney clearly authorize real estate, business, and gifting decisions?
  3. Could my family act tomorrow, without court involvement, if something happened to me?

These questions aren’t theoretical. They determine whether your farm stays operational, private, and intact across generations.

Why Farm Estate Planning Requires a Farm Lawyer

Farm succession planning is operational, dynamic, and generational. It’s not about cheap documents—it’s about strategy, coordination, and execution.

Working with a lawyer who understands farming, land ownership, business entities, and tax implications makes the difference between:

  • A plan that looks good on paper
  • And a plan that actually works when it matters most

Cheap wills and generic trusts often lead to probate, family conflict, and lost opportunities to protect the farm.

To learn more about estate planning, keep an eye on our Events page located at: https://www.wagnerlegalmn.com/events/

If you’re ready to start being proactive about your estate plan and make sure your farm transfers in the manner you intend, contact us to get started.

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Categories: Estate Planning, Farm