Attorney-designed forms, customized by you.
Create your will with confidence
Use our easy step-by-step process to create, print, and sign your will. It’s the fast and easy option to save money, time, and stress.
Choose the best option for your needs
Make your wishes known in a last will and testament customized to the laws of your state. Our guided questionnaire makes the process inexpensive and easy.
Last Will and Testament
Customize a will to suit your needs
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Estate Planning Package
All the forms you need to create a personal estate plan
Why you need a last will and testament
Making a will is the single most important thing you can do to make sure your loved ones are protected. A will allows you to control what happens to your property, children, and pets in the event of your death. When you draft your will, you decide, not the courts.
Decide distribution of property and assets
Ease the burden on loved ones—express your wishes officially, customize inheritance access, and secure your estate with explicit disinheritance, avoiding legal complications.
Appoint a guardian for loved ones
Provide a secure and loving foundation for your children and pets, maintaining control over their well-being even in your absence. The decision stays in your hands — not the state’s.
Choose who will manage your estate
Get peace of mind through proactive planning. Designate someone you can rely on to navigate and execute your wishes, ensuring a seamless and secure future for your assets.
What to expect
The process takes under an hour and you can complete it without leaving home
Create an account
Create a secure account which is accessible through an easy dashboard you can access any time.
Gather information
You will need a list of your assets, contact information for important people, and any wishes you want to be honored when you’re gone.
Complete your documents
Answer all questions, then we’ll generate your digital documents for downloading, printing, and signing.
Make it legal
Carefully follow the instructions provided in the form, which may include signing your documents in front of witnesses or a notary.
Plan for your future with confidence
This free guide will help you:
Learn the most common estate planning terms
Understand the essential estate planning tools
Gather critical information with an estate planning checklist
Frequently asked questions about wills
Estate planning laws vary and each state has different requirements for creating a will. Click on your state to find out more.
- Alabama
- Alaska
- Arizona
- Arkansas
- California
- Colorado
- Connecticut
- Delaware
- District of Columbia
- Florida
- Georgia
- Hawaii
- Idaho
- Illinois
- Indiana
- Iowa
- Kansas
- Kentucky
- Louisiana
- Maine
- Maryland
- Massachusetts
- Michigan
- Minnesota
- Mississippi
- Missouri
- Montana
- Nebraska
- Nevada
- New Hampshire
- New Jersey
- New Mexico
- New York
- North Carolina
- North Dakota
- Ohio
- Oklahoma
- Oregon
- Pennsylvania
- Rhode Island
- South Carolina
- South Dakota
- Tennessee
- Texas
- Utah
- Vermont
- Virginia
- Washington – Coming Soon
- West Virginia
- Wisconsin
- Wyoming
Legal requirements vary among states, but generally, all wills require the following to be considered valid:
- Age: You usually must be at least 18 years of age. In some states, legally emancipated minors, married people under age 18, and underage military service members are allowed to draft enforceable wills.
- Testamentary intent: The document must clearly state that it is a will. A letter simply telling your best friend you want to give them your car is not a will. You would need to include language in the letter like “This is my last will and testament” to show testamentary intent. You would also need to follow all requirements to create a valid will.
- Mental capacity: The person writing the will (the “testator”) must be of sound mind to draft an enforceable will. “Sound mind” means you are aware that you are preparing a will, know what property you have, who your natural beneficiaries are and of the will’s consequences. This standard is relatively loose. Even those who have mental illness, dementia, or Alzheimer’s have mental capacity to draft an enforceable will if they are lucid when they sign it.
- Signature: You must sign the will and do so without coercion and duress. If you are physically unable to sign, either make a mark (“X” is a signature) or instruct someone else to sign for you. However, that individual usually cannot serve as a witness.
- Witnesses: Depending on your state, you may need two or three people to witness you signing your will. Do note, however, that in many states, a witness cannot be a beneficiary of your will. If your state adds a witness affidavit to its will form, you need a notary public to make it official.
You can use your will to provide for the distribution of your real property and personal property. Real property refers to real estate. This includes your home, vacation homes, and land. Personal property covers all your other personal possessions. Your vehicles, valuables, accounts, and heirlooms are all personal property.
You should be aware that some of your assets, like insurance policies, trusts, and jointly owned property may be non-probate assets. These types of assets pass directly to the named beneficiary or joint owner. You cannot change these designations through your will.
Many people need a “simple” will that merely designates guardians for children, distributes their possessions, and appoints someone (an “executor”) to carry out their wishes.
Our do-it-yourself last will and testament forms are already attorney-developed, tailored to your state’s laws, and with your answers, they are customized to your needs. Once you download your personalized will form, you and your witnesses just need to sign it according to the instructions and applicable state law to make it legally valid.
FindLaw is not a law firm, and the forms are not a substitute for the advice or services of an attorney. If you would like in-person legal advice or if you have a more complicated situation, you may need additional legal help to complete your will. For example, you should seek the help of a knowledgeable estate planning lawyer if you:
- Have a high-value estate
- Own a business
- Have conflict in your family which may cause a will contest
- Want to create special needs trusts for adult dependents or minor children
- Have a past divorce, a blended family, or children from previous relationships
- Wish to delay payments to your children until certain conditions are met or they reach a certain age
If you die without a valid will in place, this is called intestacy, or dying intestate. There are intestacy laws in all states that specify how to divide up an estate when there is no will. Those laws (“intestacy statutes”) may or may not reflect your preferences. Intestacy statutes tend to favor spouses and children as heirs.
Your state’s default intestacy laws do not adequately substitute for a will under many situations. These situations may include:
- You have strong opinions regarding guardians for your minor children
- You wish to create a pet trust or other guardianship plan for your animals
- You want to pass property to friends, roommates, or partners
- You have a partner and are not married (the intestacy statutes generally do not include unmarried partners as heirs)
- You want to give money and assets to charitable organizations instead of family members
- You face family conflict that may cause unfair administration of your estate
If any of the above scenarios applies to you, or if you just want to make sure that your assets are distributed according to your wishes, you should create a personalized will.
You should avoid handwriting or videotaping your will if possible. A handwritten will can be difficult for a probate court to interpret. It can be easier to contest too, which could delay the distribution of your assets. Further, most states do not accept videotaped wills or spoken wills.
Although handwritten wills are not advisable, they can be valid and legally enforceable in about half of the states. A completely handwritten, unwitnessed will is called a holographic will. A holographic will must be entirely handwritten and signed. In some states, there must also be a handwritten date for a holographic will to be legally valid. States may have further requirements for holographic wills too. For instance, they may require that a holographic will was kept among important documents. Due to varying state laws and difficulty of interpreting handwriting, a holographic will should only be used as a last resort.
Wills communicated by voice or video recording are acceptable in very few states. Most states require written wills. States that consider video or spoken wills valid only do so under specific circumstances. For example, when the testator faces imminent death (soldiers on active duty, victims of a terrorist attack, etc.), any testamentary intent recorded at the time can be enforceable. This is usually called a nuncupative will. In any other circumstance, you should only use a video or audio recording as an extension of a written will to show state of mind and offer personalized messages.
A will is a legal document that describes how you would like your property to be distributed after you die. You can use a will to name guardians for children or pets, and to specify who you choose to receive your property.
With trusts, your beneficiaries do not receive their entire inheritance at once. Instead, you choose someone (a trustee) to manage your property in the best interests of your chosen beneficiaries. A living trust is a trust you make while you are alive. A testamentary trust, on the other hand, is a trust you create in your will. It is only effective after you die. With both types of trusts, your trustee will distribute the trust funds to your beneficiaries according to your instructions. Creating a special needs trust is an effective way to provide for a disabled loved one who will need ongoing care. If you would like to distribute payments on a timeframe (once a month, when a child reaches age 23, etc.), your trust can be designed for that purpose.
A will is the cornerstone of a good estate plan. But there are other estate planning tools to consider too, including trusts. These additional documents help you to make advance healthcare decisions, avoid probate, and name people to make decisions for you if necessary
Most lawyers do not recommend joint wills (one will for two individuals). Some states do not allow them, and even in those that do there are several disadvantages to joint wills. For example, a surviving spouse may not be able to change or revoke a will and assets may be tied up for years. This can cause significant problems should circumstances change for the surviving spouse.
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Ready to begin your last will and testament?
The FindLaw difference
A simple and affordable do-it-yourself guided process. Create on your timeline, your way.
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Attorney-created and reviewed
Our attorney-designed documents meet the specific needs of your state. This takes the guesswork out of choosing the right forms. We also include state-specific signature, witness, and notarization requirements.
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State-specific documents
Each state has different requirements for creating an estate plan. Licensed attorneys carefully created and reviewed our forms to address estate planning needs for each state and the District of Colombia.
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A year of unlimited updates
Life changes quickly and so do your needs. Enjoy free edits and updates to your forms for up to a full year after purchase.
You may want to reach out to a directory attorney if:
- You want a legal review of your completed will
- You have significant assets
- You have children with special needs
- You have other unique family circumstances
- You have a blended family
- You are interested in more advanced estate planning tools