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Will vs. Living Will in New York: What’s the Difference?

The short answer: a will (a “last will and testament”) is a property document that takes effect only when you die and directs who inherits your assets, while a living will is a health-care document that speaks for you while you are still alive but unable to communicate your wishes about life-sustaining treatment. They sound almost identical, but in New York they do entirely different jobs, are governed by different rules, and must be created differently. Confusing the two is one of the most common — and most expensive — mistakes we see at Morgan Legal Group. This guide walks through how each document actually works, what it covers, the realistic timeline for putting both in place, and how to keep your costs predictable.

Two Documents, Two Completely Different Jobs

The cleanest way to understand the difference is to separate them by what they control and when they take effect.

Feature Last Will and Testament Living Will
What it controls Your property, assets, and guardianship of minor children Your medical care and end-of-life treatment
When it takes effect Only at death While you are alive but incapacitated and unable to communicate
Governing law NY Estates, Powers and Trusts Law (EPTL) §3-2.1 Recognized through NY case law and constitutional right to refuse treatment
Who acts on it Executor, supervised by the Surrogate’s Court Doctors and your health-care agent
Goes through court? Yes — must be admitted to probate No — used directly by medical providers
Witnesses required At least two attesting witnesses Generally two witnesses recommended

A will has no power at all over your medical care, and a living will has no power at all over who inherits your house. You need both to be fully protected. To go deeper on the property side, see our Will Drafting Overview; for the health-care side, see our Living Will page.

How a New York Will Works

A will is the foundation of your estate plan. It names an executor to carry out your wishes, directs how your assets are distributed, and — critically for parents — can nominate a guardian for minor children.

Execution Requirements You Cannot Skip

New York is strict about how a will is signed. Under EPTL §3-2.1, a valid will requires all of the following:

  • The testator must sign at the end of the will (or another person may sign in the testator’s presence and at their direction).
  • There must be at least two attesting witnesses.
  • The testator must either sign in front of the witnesses or acknowledge the signature to each witness.
  • The testator must declare the instrument to be their will — this is called “publication.”
  • Each witness must sign at the testator’s request and add their residence address.
  • Both witnesses must sign within one 30-day period. New York law applies a rebuttable presumption that this 30-day requirement is met.

Miss any of these steps and the will can be challenged or rejected. That is precisely why a do-it-yourself form so often fails — the form is fine, but the execution ceremony is where things go wrong. Our NY Will Requirements and Will Execution pages break the ceremony down step by step.

What Happens After Death: Probate

A will takes effect only at death and must be admitted to probate in the Surrogate’s Court in the county where the person lived. The court confirms the will is valid, formally appoints the executor, and supervises the distribution of assets. This is a court process — it takes time, and it is public.

If you die without a will (intestate), EPTL Article 4 decides who inherits — your spouse, children, or other next of kin in a fixed statutory order, regardless of what you would have wanted. Learn more on our Intestacy / No Will page.

One important guardrail: even a perfectly drafted will cannot fully disinherit a spouse. Under the spousal right of election (EPTL 5-1.1-A), a surviving spouse can claim a minimum statutory share of the estate no matter what the will says.

How a New York Living Will Works

A living will is far simpler in mechanics but just as important. It records your wishes about life-sustaining treatment — for example, whether you want artificial respiration, tube feeding, or resuscitation if you are permanently unconscious or terminally ill and cannot speak for yourself.

Unlike a will, a living will:

  • Does not go to court. Your doctors and family use it directly.
  • Operates while you are alive — it has no effect once you have died.
  • Is most powerful when paired with a Health Care Proxy, which names a trusted person to make medical decisions and interpret your living will in real time.

Because a living will never touches probate and never controls property, it is a separate instrument from your last will and testament. Do not assume that signing one covers the other — it does not.

Cost and Timeline: What to Realistically Expect

Clients almost always ask two questions first: how much and how long. Here is the practical picture.

Timeline. For most people with a straightforward estate, the drafting process moves quickly:

  1. Initial consultation (about 30 minutes) — we map your assets, family, and goals.
  2. Drafting — we prepare the will, living will, and health-care proxy together as a package.
  3. Review — you read the drafts and we revise.
  4. Signing ceremony — we conduct a compliant EPTL §3-2.1 execution with witnesses.

Many clients go from first call to fully signed documents within one to two weeks. Complex estates — business interests, blended families, special-needs beneficiaries — take longer because the planning, not the paperwork, is the work.

Cost. Fees depend on complexity, so we will not quote a number you can’t rely on. What we can promise is transparency before you commit: after the consultation, you receive a clear scope and a flat quote for the document package, so there are no surprises. Drafting all three core documents together is almost always more cost-effective than commissioning them separately later.

A note on “saving money” with online forms: the recurring theme in litigated New York will disputes is a defective execution — a missing witness address, a signature in the wrong place, or no publication. A contested probate can cost a family far more in legal fees and delay than proper drafting would ever have cost. The cheapest will is the one that actually works the first time.

If your circumstances change later, you don’t necessarily need a brand-new will — a codicil or amendment can update specific provisions while keeping the rest intact.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does a living will decide who inherits my property?
No. A living will is strictly a health-care document. Inheritance is controlled by your last will and testament (or by EPTL Article 4 if you have no will). The two never overlap.

If I have a living will, do I still need a regular will?
Yes. They serve different purposes. Without a last will and testament, New York’s intestacy rules under EPTL Article 4 decide who gets your assets — not you.

Can my will leave nothing to my spouse?
Not entirely. Even with a will, the spousal right of election under EPTL 5-1.1-A guarantees a surviving spouse a minimum share of the estate.

How many witnesses does my New York will need?
At least two attesting witnesses, and both must sign within a single 30-day period, with each adding their residence address, as required by EPTL §3-2.1.

Get Both Documents Done Right

A will protects your property; a living will protects your voice in the hospital. You need both — drafted correctly, executed correctly, and coordinated so they work together. At Morgan Legal Group, Russel Morgan, Esq. and our team prepare complete New York estate plans with clear, flat pricing and a compliant signing ceremony, so nothing gets challenged later.

Schedule your 30-minute consultation today: https://calendly.com/russel-morgan/30min

Further reading from Morgan Legal Group: key things to know about writing a will.

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