Dr. Anderson, a solo practitioner, died suddenly at 58 from a heart attack. His medical practice:

  • 2,500 active patients
  • Pending malpractice lawsuit
  • No succession plan
  • No partner or associate
  • License expired at death

His estate faced: – $450,000 tail insurance premium (or liability exposure) – Practice closure obligations – Patient record transfer requirements – Regulatory compliance issues – Ongoing professional liability

His widow had no idea a medical license could create estate liability worth hundreds of thousands.

When a physician dies, there are legal requirements for returning the license to practice medicine to the state. Most states won’t allow an unlicensed person to run a medical practice in perpetuity.

This guide covers what happens to professional licenses after death, estate liability for malpractice claims, tail coverage insurance, practice succession obligations, and how to plan for professional credentials in your digital estate.

What Happens to Professional Licenses After Death

Medical Licenses

License status upon death: – License expires automatically – Cannot be transferred or inherited – Must be returned to state board – Estate cannot practice medicine – Cannot bill for services post-death

Non-physicians cannot operate a physician practice, and only a licensed physician can own and operate a professional corporation. If the doctor fails to properly plan for their eventual demise and dies without any succession planning in place, the practice would become an asset of the doctor’s estate, and the executor/administrator would try to sell the practice.

Immediate obligations after physician death: Key obligations after a physician’s death include: sending letters to all active patients within forty-eight hours of receiving notification of the physician’s death, patient medical record retention, which could raise regulatory issues if the office fails to keep records for the proper amount of time or in the proper manner, and notifying state licensing boards and malpractice carriers.

State board notifications: – Death certificate to medical board – Return physical license (if issued) – Close DEA registration – Terminate Medicare/Medicaid enrollment – Cancel hospital privileges – Notify insurance panels

Attorney Licenses

Lawyers are the agents of their clients and when the client dies, the lawyer-client relationship ends; as a matter of agency law, the lawyer’s authority to act for the client terminates at the client’s death.

When the attorney dies: Following a lawyer’s death, the financial responsibility contemplated by professional rules can be borne by the estate, and fees can be shared with the estate of a deceased lawyer.

Successor lawyer responsibilities: The State Bar provides guidance on successor lawyer duties when a lawyer dies, including managing client files, notifying clients, managing trust accounts, and handling pending matters.

Critical attorney death obligations: 1. Secure all client files immediately 2. Review trust account balances 3. Identify all pending deadlines 4. Notify clients within 48 hours 5. File motions to withdraw or substitute counsel 6. Transfer active case files 7. Arrange for file pickup 8. Maintain confidentiality

Bar association involvement: – Notify state bar of death – License becomes inactive – May appoint practice administrator – Oversee trust account distribution – Investigate for disciplinary issues – Ensure client protection

CPA Licenses

When a Circular 230 practitioner dies and leaves behind a tax practice, it may raise difficult questions for those who inherit the practice, including what happens to their clients and who is responsible for administering the deceased practitioner’s estate.

CPA license after death: – Expires with death – Cannot file returns post-death – PTIN changed to “deceased” status – Clients must find new CPA – Work-in-progress issues

Assisting accountant role: The role of an Assisting Accountant is to return client records upon the death of the practitioner, while the executor manages the estate, as the deceased practitioner’s firm is an asset that belongs to the estate.

Tax practitioner death issues: – Pending tax returns (who signs?) – Extended returns (deadlines) – Audit representations (who handles?) – Client source documents (return to clients) – Tax software subscriptions – EFIN (Electronic Filing Identification Number) termination

Other Professional Licenses

Architects, engineers, surveyors: – License expires at death – Work-in-progress must be completed by licensed professional – Seal cannot be used posthumously – Professional corporation may continue (with other licensees)

Nurses, pharmacists, therapists: – License terminates – Cannot perform licensed activities – Employer notification required – Board notification

Real estate brokers: – License expires – Agents under broker must find new broker – Pending transactions (complications) – Trust account issues

Professional Liability After Death

Malpractice Claims Against Deceased Professionals

Medical malpractice: – Claim survives death – Estate becomes defendant – Statute of limitations continues – Discovery periods still apply – Can be filed years after death

Example: – Doctor performs surgery in 2020 – Doctor dies in 2023 – Patient discovers injury in 2024 – Files claim against estate in 2025 – Estate defends case through insurance or assets

Legal malpractice: A legal malpractice cause of action can be brought after an attorney’s death and the right survives resulting in the attorney’s estate being named as the defendant.

Common legal malpractice scenarios post-death: – Missed statute of limitations – Conflict of interest (discovered later) – Negligent advice (damages appear later) – Trust account mismanagement – Failed to file appeals – Drafting errors in wills/contracts

Accounting malpractice: – Tax preparation errors – Audit negligence – Financial statement mistakes – Missed deductions (discovered in IRS audit) – Incorrect valuations

Estate Liability Exposure

Maximum liability = estate value: – Creditors (including malpractice claimants) can reach estate assets – Cannot reach beneficiaries’ inherited assets (once distributed) – Unless fraudulent transfer – Or beneficiary was fiduciary who caused liability

Protected assets: – Life insurance proceeds (if payable to named beneficiary, not estate) – Retirement accounts (if beneficiary designated) – Joint tenancy property (passes outside estate) – Trust assets (if irrevocable and properly structured)

Exposed assets: – Probate estate assets – Life insurance payable to estate – Assets titled in deceased’s name – Professional corporation assets (sometimes)

Priority of claims: – Administrative expenses – Funeral costs – Taxes – Malpractice judgments (unsecured creditors) – Other creditors – Beneficiaries (only if assets remain)

Tail Coverage Insurance

What Is Tail Coverage?

Tail coverage, technically known as an extended reporting period (ERP), provides protection for claims reported after a policy has ended, as long as the alleged incident occurred during the active period of coverage.

How it works: – Claims-made policy expires (death, retirement, career change) – Patient/client injured during active coverage – Claim filed after coverage ended – Tail coverage pays defense and damages – Without tail, no coverage

Example: – Doctor with claims-made malpractice policy 2015-2024 – Dies in 2024, policy expires – No tail coverage purchased – Patient discovers injury from 2022 surgery in 2026 – Files claim 2026 – NO COVERAGE (claim reported after policy ended) – Estate personally liable

With tail coverage: – Same scenario – Tail purchased before/after death – Claim reported in 2026 – COVERAGE APPLIES (incident during policy period) – Insurance pays

Automatic Tail Coverage

Physicians: ProAssurance claims-made policies provide automatic tail coverage for death or disability. Some professional liability policies include automatic tail coverage provisions under specific conditions, such as retirement, death, or permanent disability.

Not all policies include automatic tail: – Read policy carefully – May require application – May require premium payment – Time limits to purchase

Typical automatic tail scenarios: – Death – Total permanent disability – Retirement (age 55+ and 10+ years insured) – Military deployment

Tail Coverage Costs

Physicians: – 150-300% of annual premium (typical) – $150,000-$500,000 (for high-risk specialties) – Lifetime coverage – Single premium payment

Attorneys: Attorney malpractice insurance retirement tail coverage can vary significantly in cost, and for some attorneys, the cost of tail coverage can exceed their entire annual premium.

CPAs and other professionals: – 100-200% of annual premium – $10,000-$100,000 – Less expensive than physicians

Factors affecting cost: – Specialty/practice area – Claims history – Years in practice – Coverage limits – State (varies widely)

Purchasing Tail After Death

For attorneys: If an attorney dies, an Extended Reporting Endorsement (ERE) can be purchased in the name of the deceased attorney’s estate if timely pursued in accord with the policy provisions. Best practices would be for the attorney to have written instructions to alert the heirs to the procedure and need for an ERE to protect the attorney’s estate and family. In the event of death, the insured’s estate, heirs, executors or administrators must, within sixty (60) days of the expiration of the policy period, provide the company with written proof of the date of death.

Time limits: – Usually 30-90 days after death – Strict deadline (no extensions) – Must act quickly – Executor may not know about it

Required documentation: – Death certificate – Proof of estate authority – Application form – Premium payment

Who decides to purchase? – Executor/administrator – Must evaluate: – Risk of future claims – Cost of tail – Estate assets at risk – Professional’s claims history – Specialty risk level

Alternatives to Tail Coverage

Occurrence-based policy: – Covers incidents that occurred during policy period – Regardless when claim filed – More expensive annually – No tail coverage needed – Less common for professionals

Prior acts coverage (nose coverage): – New policy covers old acts – Must maintain continuous coverage – Gap in coverage = no protection – Not available after death

Self-insurance: – Estate accepts risk – Hopes no claims arise – Gamble that can backfire – May be only option if tail too expensive

Practice Succession Planning

Medical Practice Succession

Options: 1. Partner/associate succession (planned) 2. Sale to another physician (emergency) 3. Practice management company (temporary) 4. Wind down practice (closure)

Planned succession advantages: – Patients maintain continuity – Practice value maximized – Regulatory compliance easier – Orderly transition – Staff retention

Emergency succession challenges: – Buyer at disadvantage (fire sale) – Patients scatter – Staff leave – Value plummets – Compliance rushed

Regulatory requirements: – Patient notification (48 hours in many states) – Record retention (typically 7-10 years minimum) – Record transfer procedures – HIPAA compliance – Controlled substance inventory – DEA termination

Law Practice Succession

Contingent fee cases: – May continue (with successor counsel) – Client consent required – Fee splitting issues – Ethics opinions vary by state – Valuable estate asset

Hourly cases: – Client may terminate – Estate entitled to fees earned – Must complete time records – Bill for work performed – Client owns file

Trust account: – Frozen at death – Forensic accounting – Client funds returned – Bar oversight – Criminal exposure if mismanaged

Accounting Practice Succession

Tax season death: – Critical timing issue – Extensions may help – Clients need immediate replacement – Source documents with deceased CPA – Returns in progress

Audit engagements: – Cannot complete without license – Successor CPA must start over (often) – Client relationship with deceased (not firm) – Liability issues

Practice value: – Recurring revenue (tax clients) – Can be sold to another CPA – Client retention risk – Personal relationships matter

Digital Components of Professional Licenses

Online License Portals

State licensing boards: – Account in deceased’s name – Executor access complicated – Some states: death notification online – Others: Require written/notarized documents – License status updated to “deceased”

Continuing education platforms: – CME/CLE/CPE accounts – Credits tied to license – No longer relevant after death – May contain purchased courses (value?)

Professional Association Memberships

Medical associations: – AMA membership – State medical societies – Specialty boards – Board certification status (expires)

Bar associations: – State bar membership – American Bar Association – Specialty sections – Automatic termination or notification required

CPA organizations: – AICPA membership – State CPA societies – Specialty credentials (CFF, ABV, etc.)

Professional Email and Accounts

Email addresses: – DrSmith@medicalpractice.com – Attorney@lawfirm.com – CPA@accountingfirm.com

Issues: – Client communications ongoing – Appointment reminders (medical) – Court notifications (legal) – IRS correspondence (tax) – Must monitor post-death

Best practices: – Auto-reply explaining death – Forwarding to successor – Monitor for 6-12 months – Maintain professional tone – Provide contact information for urgent matters

Estate Planning for Licensed Professionals

Pre-Death Planning Essentials

Practice succession plan: – Written agreement – Buy-sell agreement (if partners) – Valuation method – Payment terms – Non-compete – Client transition process

Professional liability planning: – Review tail coverage options – Purchase in advance (if retiring) – Leave instructions for executor – Budget estate funds for tail premium – Consider occurrence policy

Client/patient notification: – Letter templates prepared – Successor identified – Contact information ready – Executor authorized to send – Timeline specified

Digital asset documentation: – All professional accounts listed – Passwords in password manager – License numbers recorded – Bar/board contact information – Emergency contact designee at licensing board

Emergency Succession Protocols

Sudden death or disability: – Designated emergency contact – Access to office (keys, codes) – Computer passwords – Client lists – Calendar access – Pending deadlines documented

Medical practice emergency plan: – Covering physician agreement – On-call schedule backup – Hospital notification process – Patient emergency contacts – Prescription refill protocol

Law practice emergency plan: – Backup counsel for court appearances – Trust account co-signatory (with restrictions) – Calendar monitoring – Court filing deadlines – Client emergency contacts

Accounting practice emergency plan: – CPA to complete tax returns – Access to client source documents – Tax software access – Extension filing authority – Client notification list

Executor Instructions

Specific professional guidance:

PROFESSIONAL LICENSE INSTRUCTIONS

License Information:
- Medical License #12345 (California)
- DEA Registration: DA1234567
- Board Certification: Internal Medicine

Immediate Actions Upon My Death:
1. Contact Dr. Jane Smith (successor): 555-1234
2. Notify California Medical Board within 48 hours
3. Send patient letters (template in file cabinet, drawer 2)
4. Contact malpractice carrier: OAMIC, policy #987654
5. Evaluate tail coverage purchase (budget $250,000)

Malpractice Insurance:
- Carrier: OAMIC
- Policy expires: [date]
- MUST purchase tail within 60 days of death
- Cost: Approximately $250,000 (2.5x annual premium)
- THIS IS CRITICAL - protects estate from future claims

Practice Succession:
- Dr. Smith has agreed to purchase practice
- Sale agreement in safe deposit box
- Practice value: $500,000 (approximate)
- Patients to be notified and given choice
- Staff employment continues under Dr. Smith

Patient Records:
- Must retain for 10 years minimum
- Transfer to Dr. Smith if patient consents
- Otherwise store with record storage company (prepaid)
- HIPAA compliance essential

Digital Assets:
- EHR system: login information in password manager
- Patient portal: notify IT to disable scheduling
- Professional email: set auto-reply, forward to Dr. Smith
- State license portal: login in password manager

Reducing Estate Liability

Asset Protection Strategies

Professional corporation: – Limits personal liability (during life) – Does NOT protect personal estate after death – Malpractice claims can pierce corporate veil – Corporate assets still exposed

Irrevocable life insurance trust (ILIT): – Life insurance proceeds outside estate – Protected from creditors (including malpractice) – Must be properly structured – Cannot be payable to estate

Retirement accounts: – Name individual beneficiaries (not estate) – Creditor protection varies by state – Federal ERISA protections (for qualified plans) – IRA protections vary

Joint tenancy property: – Passes outside probate – Not subject to estate creditors (generally) – Spouse or children – Timing of transfer matters (fraudulent transfer concerns)

Asset protection trusts: – Domestic asset protection trusts (DAPTs) – Available in some states (Nevada, Delaware, South Dakota, etc.) – Must be established well before claim arises – Expensive and complex – May not protect against malpractice in some jurisdictions

Insurance Planning

Adequate coverage limits: – $1M/$3M minimum (physicians) – Higher for high-risk specialties – Consider umbrella policy – Estate protection

Tail coverage in life insurance planning: – Some policies include free tail at death – If not, budget for tail in estate plan – Life insurance can fund tail premium – Protect estate assets for family

Disability insurance: – Often includes tail coverage if totally disabled – Own-occupation definition important – Protects against forced early retirement

Conclusion

Professional licenses create unique estate planning challenges that most people never consider. A medical license, law license, or CPA certification can generate enormous estate liability if malpractice claims arise after death—yet the license itself expires instantly and has no transferable value.

Key risks:

⚠ Malpractice claims filed years after death ⚠ Tail coverage costing $100,000-$500,000 ⚠ Practice obligations with no license to perform them ⚠ Patient/client abandonment issues ⚠ Regulatory compliance requirements ⚠ Trust account mismanagement exposure ⚠ Record retention obligations ⚠ Estate assets exposed to claims

Protection strategies:

✓ Purchase professional liability tail coverage (or choose policy with free tail at death) ✓ Create written practice succession plan ✓ Designate emergency backup professional ✓ Use asset protection structures (ILIT, retirement beneficiaries, joint tenancy) ✓ Document all professional accounts and credentials ✓ Leave detailed executor instructions ✓ Prepare patient/client notification letters in advance ✓ Review and update annually ✓ Consider occurrence-based policy (no tail needed) ✓ Maintain proper professional insurance throughout career

Most important:

Your professional license dies with you, but your professional liability lives on. An estate without tail coverage faces unlimited exposure to malpractice claims from work performed years earlier.

For physicians, attorneys, CPAs, and other licensed professionals: – Tail coverage is NOT optional—it’s essential – Budget for tail in estate planning – Leave clear instructions for executor – Act within strict time limits (30-90 days usually) – Protect your family from professional liability

For executors of licensed professionals: – Tail coverage decision is urgent (30-90 day deadline) – Failure to purchase can cost estate hundreds of thousands – Consult with professional liability insurance expert – Understand deceased’s claims history and risk – Don’t wait—act immediately

Your professional license is both your greatest asset during life and potentially your estate’s greatest liability after death. Plan accordingly.


Resources

Sources

By Pixels & Probate

Pixels & Probate covers the full spectrum of digital estate planning and administration — from recovering a deceased loved one's accounts to proactively organizing your own digital life. Founded from personal experience navigating a parent's digital estate in 2025.

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