Estate planning isn’t just for the wealthy or the elderly. If you have people you love — or assets you’ve worked hard for — a plan protects both.
The five components of a complete estate plan
Probate isn’t a dirty word. It exists for good reasons. But understanding what it actually costs your family helps explain why thoughtful estate planning tries to work around it.
Probate is the court-supervised process of settling your estate after you die. A court validates your will, notifies creditors, gives them a chance to make claims against your estate, and then oversees the transfer of your remaining assets to your beneficiaries. If you die without a will — called dying “intestate” — the court still supervises, but your state’s default rules decide who gets what, which may not match what you would have wanted.
Time
Even simple estates take time. Family waits. Assets are frozen while the court process runs its course.
Cost
On a $500,000 estate: $10,000–$20,000 in court fees, executor fees, and attorney fees that doesn’t reach your family.
Public
What you owned, what you owed, who got what — all public record. Many families prefer to keep this private.
Multi-State
Two separate probate proceedings. Two sets of fees. Two timelines. A trust avoids this entirely.
Having a trust doesn’t automatically keep your assets out of probate. The trust has to be funded — meaning your assets must be formally transferred into it. A house that isn’t re-titled into the trust. A bank account with no beneficiary named. These go through probate anyway, no matter what your trust document says. This is one of the most common and most avoidable estate planning mistakes — and one of the reasons working with an attorney who reviews your asset titling as part of the process makes such a meaningful difference for your family.
Both involve a will. The difference is whether a trust is part of the plan — and that difference matters a lot.
Will-based plan
A will directs who receives your property and, if you have minor children, who raises them. It requires court supervision after your death — a public, time-consuming process.
Right for: very simple situations with minimal assets and no real property. Most clients upgrade to a trust-based plan after consultation.
Trust-based plan — recommended for most families
A revocable trust holds your assets during your lifetime and passes them directly to your beneficiaries at death — no court, no delay, no public record. A pour-over will works alongside it.
Right for: anyone who owns property, has minor children, or wants to keep their affairs private and efficient for their family.
Allison’s approach: “I generally recommend trust-based planning for most clients — and I’ll explain exactly why during your consultation. For some situations, a simple will is genuinely the right answer. I’ll always tell you honestly which one fits your life.”
Both are trusts. They do very different jobs — and choosing the wrong one (or missing one you needed) has real consequences.
Holds your assets during your lifetime and passes them to your beneficiaries after death — without going through probate. You can change it, add to it, or revoke it entirely at any time.
Generally can’t be changed once created. In exchange for giving up control, you gain significant legal and financial protections.
Many clients have both — a revocable trust for everyday estate planning and probate avoidance, and an irrevocable trust for a specific protection goal. Each does a different job. I’ll help you figure out which combination is right for your situation.
What happens to your assets if you need long-term care?
$8,000–$12,000
Per month
That’s the average cost of nursing home care. A single extended health event can consume a lifetime of savings in just a few years — leaving nothing for the people you planned to protect.
70%
Of people over 65 will need long-term care
This isn’t a rare scenario. It’s a likely one. The right question isn’t “will this happen?” — it’s “is my plan ready if it does?”
What this means for your estate plan: Long-term care insurance and asset protection are questions worth raising early — even for younger clients. An irrevocable trust can help shield assets from long-term care costs when structured correctly. I draft the trust documents; for clients who need specialized Medicaid planning or benefits coordination, I work with dedicated Medicaid planning professionals who handle that side of the equation.
Online wills and trusts can be a reasonable starting point for very simple situations — and I’ll always tell you honestly if that’s the case for you. But they don’t always do what people think they’re doing.
One of the most common problems I see: someone purchases a trust online and also buys a deed transfer to move their home into the trust. But the will doesn’t reference the trust, the deed isn’t completed correctly, and the asset never actually makes it in. The trust exists on paper — but it holds nothing. The family discovers this during an already difficult time, and the estate ends up in probate anyway.
A complete estate plan isn’t just documents. It’s documents that work together, assets that are properly titled, and a plan that reflects your actual situation. That’s what a flat-fee attorney engagement gives you — and for most families, the difference in cost is smaller than they expect.
A will goes through probate — a public, court-supervised process that takes time and costs money. A trust does not. If you own a home or have minor children, a trust is usually worth the investment.
Especially if you have children — yes. If something happened to you tomorrow, who would raise your kids? Who could access your accounts to pay the bills? A will and power of attorney answer these questions before a crisis forces them.
Sometimes yes. A revocable trust handles probate avoidance and asset distribution. An irrevocable trust adds protection for Medicaid planning or asset shielding. Many clients have both, doing different jobs.
Yes — and a good estate planning attorney understands what your advisor does, not just what your documents say. Because I hold a CFP® in addition to my JD and CPA, I can design an estate plan that accounts for your financial and tax picture from the start — so your documents don’t work against the rest of your planning.