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WealthChem

One-page guides you can print, stick on the fridge, and actually finish.

Five short checklists for the money tasks families put off the longest. Every guide is yours to print and share — no sign-up, no watermark.

Guide 1 of 5

Emergency Fund Starter

Six concrete steps to your first $1,000 — and what to aim for after that.

Six steps, in order

  • Open a separate savings account at a different bank than your checking — money you don't see every day is money you don't spend by accident.
  • Nickname the account something that stops you mid-click, like “Car repairs & real emergencies only.”
  • Set an automatic transfer for every payday — even $25. At $25 a week, you cross $1,000 in about 40 weeks without thinking about it once.
  • Send half of every windfall straight to the fund: tax refund, work bonus, cash gifts, anything you sell.
  • Write down what counts as an emergency — job loss, a medical bill, a car or home repair — and what doesn't, before the moment arrives.
  • At $1,000, pause and celebrate. Then set the next marker: one month of essential expenses, then three.
Put your own numbers in the emergency fund calculator

Guide 2 of 5

The 15-Minute Beneficiary Audit

Beneficiary forms — not your will — usually decide who inherits these accounts. Here's the once-a-year check.

Your 15-minute audit

  • List every account with a beneficiary form: current and old 401(k)s, IRAs, life insurance (work and personal), HSAs, pensions, and annuities.
  • Ask your bank and brokerage about payable-on-death and transfer-on-death forms — many accounts can pass directly to a person you name.
  • Confirm every account names a primary beneficiary — a blank form can send that account through probate.
  • Add a contingent (backup) beneficiary everywhere, in case your first choice can't inherit.
  • Look for outdated names — an ex-spouse, or a relative who has passed away. In many cases the form wins, even over a will.
  • If a minor child is named directly, ask an estate-planning attorney about naming a trust, custodian, or guardian instead.
  • Re-check after a marriage, divorce, birth, or death — and put a 15-minute reminder on your calendar once a year either way.
Read the full guide to beneficiary designations

Guide 3 of 5

Estate Document Checklist

The eight readiness items, as a check-off list you can bring to an attorney's office.

The eight readiness items

  • A will — says who inherits what, and names an executor to carry it out.
  • A trust review — a conversation with an attorney about whether a living trust fits your family and your state.
  • A financial power of attorney — names someone who can handle money matters if you can't.
  • An advance health-care directive — puts your medical wishes in writing so nobody has to guess.
  • Current beneficiary designations — checked on every retirement account and policy, because those forms usually override a will.
  • Asset titling reviewed — how your home and major accounts are owned, looked over with a professional.
  • Guardianship for minor children — named in your will, so a court doesn't have to decide who would raise them.
  • A digital assets plan — a list of online accounts and passwords, plus one trusted person who knows where it lives.

An attorney note: these documents come from a licensed estate-planning attorney in your state — not from us, and not from a fill-in-the-blank form. This checklist simply makes that first meeting faster and more focused.

Score yourself with the estate readiness check

Guide 4 of 5

5 Questions to Ask HR About Your 401(k)

Five questions that take one short email to HR — and shape decades of saving.

Copy these into an email

  • “What's the exact match formula?” If it's 50% of the first 6% of pay, you need to contribute 6% to collect every matched dollar.
  • “What's the vesting schedule?” Your own contributions are always yours — ask when the company's matching money fully belongs to you, too.
  • “Is there a Roth 401(k) option, and can I split contributions?” Roth money is taxed now, and qualified withdrawals in retirement can come out tax-free under current law.
  • “Which funds are in the lineup, and what does each one cost?” Ask whether there's a low-cost index or target-date fund, and ask for the expense ratios in writing.
  • “Can I turn on auto-escalation?” An automatic 1% bump each year raises your saving rate without you feeling it month to month.

Tax treatment depends on your situation and on current law, which can change — a quick check with a qualified tax professional confirms what fits you.

Read: 401(k), Roth, HSA — which comes first?

Guide 5 of 5

Life Insurance Conversation Prep

What to gather before any policy conversation — so the meeting is about your real numbers, not guesswork.

Gather these before you sit down

  • Your annual income, and how many years your family would need it replaced if you weren't here.
  • Every debt that wouldn't disappear with you: mortgage balance, car loans, student loans, credit cards.
  • Your existing coverage: the group policy amount through work — and whether it follows you if you change jobs — plus any personal policies you already own.
  • Future goals with rough price tags: college for the kids, paying off the house, final expenses.
  • A quick health snapshot — medications, conditions, tobacco use — because carriers ask about these during underwriting.
  • The monthly amount your budget can comfortably commit, so any coverage you consider fits real life.
Estimate your number with the life insurance needs calculator