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So, I know this isn't a caregiving question, per se...but I thought I would ask for opinions.


I'm finally at the tail end of going through mom's possessions. Now I'm just weeding through all of her paperwork. To say that mom liked to save paperwork is like saying the sun is kinda hot.


I have about 8 file boxes/banker's boxes full of old paperwork, including a box full of years and years of bank statements.


Her estate has been settled, and all funds paid out; none of these accounts are open anymore.


So, do you think it's necessary to shred all of the pages of the statements? Or just the "cover" page that has her name and address on it? In theory, no one should be able to use her SS# for ID theft, since it was reported to SS that she passed away; and frankly, even if someone is able to use it, that's not going to be my problem to solve - at least, I don't think it would be.


Would you spend hours shredding? Or just throw it into recycling?

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"Ultimately, experts recommend keeping most estate papers for seven to 10 years, just to be safe. Specifically, the recommendations break out this way:

Keep tax returns and supporting documents, records of property or investment sales, appraisals, and the estate's bank statements and accounting records including payment to creditors for at least seven years.

Keep records of any trusts established with estate assets until at least 10 years after the youngest beneficiary becomes eligible to take their full share.
Keep the deceased person's death certificate, ongoing trust documents, the original will, and letters testamentary issued by the court indefinitely.

That's potentially a lot of paper for a larger estate. If you don't have room for all of it, consider keeping only originals, such as a signed will or certified copy of a death certificate, and scanning the rest. Keep a copy on an external hard drive or disk and back it up to the cloud as well. Check with your service provider to be sure that your data will be encrypted.

When you are ready to get rid of documents, be sure to shred them because many estate records contain significant personal information."

(source: https://info.legalzoom.com/article/how-long-keep-settled-estate-papers)
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MountainMoose Feb 2022
Excellent post, Geaton777! I was Mom's live-in caregiver and her financial and medical POA. When my mom passed, those POAs ended and my sister became her executor. I gave ALL of Mom's papers to my sister.

For my protection (my narcissistic sisters accused me of stealing Mom's money even though I was always open with her "books" and often told them if they had questions I'd show them everything. One sister, on advice from Mom's lawyer, did ask specific questions. I showed them all receipts and the statements I used showing every penny. Sister told the other "everything was on the up and up" but the accusations continued.).

Anyway, the thought of scanning two-foot length of documents exhausted me. For each month, I laid out the receipts and/or documents and carefully photographed the set, ensuring each photo was clearly showed the information. Actually, that process went pretty fast.
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I recommend shredding. You can usually have it done for about 150.00 for that many boxes. Check with your local law enforcement, ours has shredathons twice annually.

What concerns me is that one paper that has someone else's personal information on it.

If you are certain that nothing like that exists, then recycling is probably fine.
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Shred. Then you don’t have to worry about it. My mom has kept all her paperwork for 60 years. No idea what’s in all those boxes. I would pay a company to do it. They will get it done quick.
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Thank you everyone!

Well, it's been 4 days of shredding, but we're mostly through it. DH and I have worked out a pretty good system, I sort and he shreds.

I probably could have asked my neighbor to use his burn barrel; but this really hasn't taken as long as I had thought it might.

ITRR - I had no idea that compressed paper would only smolder and not burn! I guess since fire needs oxygen to burn, the paper pressed together robs it of that.

I'm going to hold onto her tax papers. Not just the 7/10 years, but ALL of them (back from 1955, no kidding!) I want to talk to my accountant and see what his recommendation is; but I'm also going to hold onto them for a bit to take a look, maybe along with my sisters. I think it might be fascinating to look back at tax records from 70 years or such, DH said it's a little bit of history, and I agree. It's only 1 box of stuff, not at all unmanageable once the time comes to have to get rid of it.

Thank you for all of your suggestions!
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DeckApe Feb 2022
About reading old tax returns, I got a look at some 25 year old tax returns of my parents. Learned a few things; some mysteries were solved. No need for me to save those memories.
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Lots of good answers here. Basically, shred is better. However, if your mom was anything like my mom, that depends on the amount of sorting you do. Mom kept everything. That included old bills, letters from family, even Christmas and birthday cards. She had saved the papers for the purchase of every car, including the insurance papers back to the 1951 Ford. Every utility bill. You get the idea.

My sisters and I (and once in a while our brother) sat in the living room of her old home and went through every box in 3 hour sessions over months. Greeting cards and other things with incomplete names and no addresses or information went straight into big black trash bags. Everything with a complete name or an address or any personal information went into a shred box. There was no estate to speak of. Once the bills were paid, etc., there remains about $1000 each. The sister who is executor will keep the account open until Mom has been gone a full year, just in case. However, any scrap that might allow some unscrupulous person to file a false claim against the estate will be shredded and taken to a facility that will accept shredded paper for recycling. We will pay for that. Reason? The estate cannot afford the legal fees to handle a false claim. Those who would cheat you will think of all sorts of ways to misuse or misrepresent data they may get from the trash. Shred it all and have it securely recycled. It is worth it. If you are your mother's executor, it will be your problem if someone makes a false claim against the estate. Even if a claim is false, it must be answered. It is not anyone else's problem, it is yours. Take the time or money for the shredding. It is worth it.
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I second the idea of a paid shredding service.
Unfortunately there are none in my immediate area and I still have boxes of stuff that I have been working through very, very slowly 🤣 - I wish I still had access to a burn barrel. You are lucky that only the cover page has identifying information, most of my stuff has something embedded on every page.
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NGE, I once took enough papers to fill three 50 gallon totes to a paper shredder 45 miles away. We emptied the bags into the totes, they dumped the totes into the huge shredder, paper clips and staples included. I stood and watched the whole process. Truly the way to go if at all possible for you.

Previously I had been removing any paper with names, etc and burning them out back in my burn pit or shredding in my paper shredder in the house. The papers without info and my shredded paper went to a local school paper recycling dumpster. The school gets paid for the paper.
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notgoodenough Feb 2022
Unfortunately, no such service exists around here.

What I can do is split it up and mail it to my sisters to deal with...again, just kidding. Well, kinda.
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In my area, there is an organization that provides employment opportunities for disabled folks. One of the services they offer is shredding. However, if I hadn't known someone who works there, I would have never known about their shredding service as they just don't advertise it much. Is there an organization in your area that provides employment opportunities to handicapped folks? If so, check with them to see if they offer shredding. You just never know!
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Some communities in this area offer free shredding at a municipal location, usually in Spring or in Fall.  No costs are involved.   You might check with your local community's waste disposal section.

I too would shred it all; many solicitors (I don't know if any of the data in question includes this)  use mail merge functions so that names appear repeatedly, as if the mass produced solicitations are individually tailored.
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Where I live there is a veteran-owned shredding business that brings a truck to your location. Everything goes in, paper clips, etc. Gets done lickety split and no hoisting heavy boxes of papers.
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