About
Life Moving Forward (LMF) is a network of life transition professionals specializing in senior move management, real estate consolidation, placement, care, and most other transitional needs.
Through personal and professional experience, we have established relationships and created a referral list to make difficult transition times easier on individuals and their families.
We provide the service and compassion necessary to make this stage of life more smooth and more comfortable for transitioning adults and their support system. By putting in the hard work and forming relationships on your behalf, we free up your time to focus on your family's health, safety, and happiness.
Services
As a senior move management referral network LMF will help with all aspects of moving forward, beginning to end, down to the smallest detail. With us, you get much more than a real estate broker - We provide our clients with the highest level of service while they make their life transition.
Our network of home care professionals, estate planning attorneys, moving companies, and senior living centers will provide you with comprehensive service as you plan the next stage of your life.
From listing your property, managing your home's clean out, setting up meetings with an estate attorney, forming relationships with care professionals, and finally moving you to your new home, LMF will be with you each step of the way.
contact
Connect with Us
This is the most important call you will make in this challenging time of your life.
> TELEPHONE:
303.829.8438
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News & Publications
Are you worried about your parents' diminishing physical capabilities or your daughter's plans to pay for her child's college education? Is one of your relatives going through an especially difficult financial period? As you get together with your adult children and aging parents to enjoy home-cooked meals or celebrate your family's holiday traditions, use the following five tips to help you discuss difficult financial issues.
Helpful Links
Basics of Estate Planning:
This is another in a series of blogs on the basics of estate planning. This week, we’ll take a look at asset protection.
Much depends upon whose assets you are looking to protect. If the assets are those that are coming to you, the debtor, then typically, those can be protected completely.
The debtor could protect their own assets in three general ways: 1) insuring against the risk, 2) shifting the assets into categories protected under state law or federal bankruptcy law, or 3) shifting the assets to someone or an entity where the creditor cannot attach.