Stirp helps you organize the operational reality of an estate — accounts, documents, decisions — so the people you love don't have to figure it out alone.
You're more than halfway there. Three categories left to start.
Not just storage. The structure mirrors what someone actually has to do — bank by bank, account by account, in the order they'll need to act on them.
The Massachusetts estate-tax threshold is $2M. Rhode Island's is $1.7M. California has step-up-in-basis quirks the IRS won't explain. Your roadmap reflects where you actually live.
When the moment comes, your named executor doesn't have to dig through a filing cabinet at 2 a.m. They get a clear path forward, with the people you trust looped in.
Most families find out about state estate-tax thresholds the week they're trying to file. Stirp surfaces them while there's still time to do something about them — quietly, in plain English, with a clear next step.
Based on what you've recorded so far — banking, retirement, property — your estate is likely to cross that line. That doesn't mean you owe anything now. It means your executor will need to file a Massachusetts estate tax return when the time comes, and a CPA can help you put a few simple things in place now to make that filing easier and cheaper.
Find a CPA who's done this →Built by a team going through this themselves.