Protect your loved
ones with a legally
binding will.
Take 15 minutes to control your future. Need help? Schedule a call with our network attorneys for advice. Last will and testaments start at $89.
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A do-it-yourself last will that's easy to personalize
- Create a personalized, state-specific last will
- Our step-by-step guide will take you through the process easily
- Free revisions for 30 days after purchase
Get a last will plus legal advice for 2 weeks after purchase.
- 2 weeks of legal questions related to your last will, answered by our network of attorneys. Renews monthly at $14.99. Cancel anytime.*
- Free revisions for 30 days after purchase
- Everything included with the Basic Last Will
The power of 3 documents, all in 1 package. Save $100 by bundling. Plus, legal help for 1 year.
- The essentials: Last Will, Financial Power of Attorney, and Living Will
- 1 year of legal questions related to your estate planning, answered by our network of attorneys. Renews annually at $199. Cancel anytime.**
- Free revisions for 1 year after purchase
Why you need a last will
Appoint someone to settle your affairs
This person will also ensure that your beneficiaries receive their inheritance.
Choose who will receive your property
Specify how you'd like to transfer your property to your heirs.
Decide who you want to raise your kids
Name the right legal guardians for your children if you or your spouse can't be there.
Why choose us
Why choose us
Convenient
Create and complete your last will from the comfort of your own home.
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Trusted
Every 4 minutes someone completes their last will with LegalZoom.
Accessible legal advice
Rely on guidance from highly-rated lawyers that you can choose from our vetted network.
Fast and Easy
Our step-by-step process has allowed many of our customers to create a will in under 15 minutes.
Here's how it works
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Answer a series of questions
You'll choose someone to settle your affairs, decide what you want to leave to loved ones or charities, and name a guardian for your kids.
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We'll create your will
We'll use your answers to create your will, which you can review in your account.
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Review with attorney, or on your own
Print and complete using our instructions, or have your lawyer do a final review with you over the phone.
Get answers to common questions Answers to common questions
Yes. Our team of experienced attorneys have designed our Last Will to meet the specific laws and requirements of each U.S. state.
Last wills will not be admitted by a court unless the following criteria are met: You must be of sound mind. You must be acting of your own free will without undue influence or duress from others. The will must be signed and witnessed according to the applicable laws of your state.
Probate is the legal process through which the court decides how an estate will be divided. The court will look to your last will to decide how to distribute your property and will follow the will, unless it is successfully contested by your heirs. Generally, if an estate includes real property, a formal probate action is required. However, in many states, if the estate is of minimal value or consists solely of personal property, probate is not required and other legal remedies are available.
You can leave anyone out of your last will, subject to certain limitations. Many laws have been enacted to protect spouses and minor children. If you wish to disinherit one of your children or to give one child less than another, you should clearly state that intention in your last will.
You can revoke a last will any time before death by making a new last will that states that all prior last wills are no longer valid. To revoke a last will without making a new one, all you have to do is intentionally tear it up, deface it, burn it, or destroy it. If this is done accidentally, the last will is not revoked. What happens if you make a new last will (which revokes all prior last wills) and then decide that you like your old last will better? You need to make an entirely new last will that replaces the new one and mimics the old one.
The old last will is invalid and cannot be revived after it has been revoked. One way to make changes to a last will, without revoking it entirely, is to make a codicil, which is an amendment to a last will.
However, a codicil must be signed and witnessed just like a last will, so it may be easier to make an entirely new last will. Be sure not to make changes to your last will after it has been witnessed and signed. If you cross out a person's name or add clauses to a last will that has already been signed, you risk making the whole last will invalid.
After you sign your last will, you should keep it in a safe, easily accessible place. Be sure that the person whom you have appointed as your executor knows exactly where you stored your last will. You do not have to file it with the court or place it in the public record. However, some courts may permit you to deposit your last will with them, depending on how busy or crowded they are.
The general rule is that all debts must be paid before any assets are distributed. Your outstanding credit card balances, for instance, are generally paid before any money or gifts are distributed to your heirs.
An exception to this general rule is for "secured debts," that is, debts that allow the lender to take possession of a specific piece of property if the debt is not repaid. Examples of such secured debts are mortgages or auto loans. If a piece of property is collateral for a secured debt, that property can be distributed, but the debt will generally go with it. For instance, say you have a car worth $10,000 and a loan on the car of $5,000. You can leave the car to someone in your will, but it will be that person's obligation to pay off the loan.
What happens if you owe more than you own? In general, people cannot inherit another person's debts. If there is not enough cash in the estate to pay debts, all property of the estate will be sold to pay the debts and no one will inherit anything. For example, if someone dies owing $12,000 in credit card debt, but has cash and property worth only $10,000, the property will be sold and the $10,000 will be paid to the credit card issuer.
Attorney advice (Legal Advantage Plus) is our membership-based service that gives you access to a vetted network of attorneys in all 50 states. You can schedule calls with an attorney to get your questions answered on estate planning, to get your completed documents reviewed, or on other personal legal matters.
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- **Telephone consultations with a participating firm, during normal business hours, of up to one half (1/2) hour each, limited to one consultation for each new legal matter. Excludes business-related matters. Limit one Legal Assist Plan per estate plan. Benefits to the Legal Assist Plan continue automatically for $199 per year. You can cancel online or by calling. Attorney services are fulfilled through Legal Advantage Plus. For full details, see the Legal Plan Contract and Subscription Terms.
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