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Can I Write My Own Will in New York? (DIY & Holographic Risks)

Yes — you can write your own will in New York, and the state does not require you to hire an attorney to do it. What New York does require is that whatever you write be signed and witnessed exactly the way the law demands. Under the New York Estates, Powers and Trusts Law (EPTL) […]

How Many Witnesses Does a New York Will Need?

A New York will needs at least two attesting witnesses. That number comes straight from the New York Estates, Powers and Trusts Law (EPTL) §3-2.1, which governs how a will must be executed and attested. Two is the legal minimum — not one, and there is no upper limit, though using exactly two (or sometimes […]

How to Change a Will in New York With a Codicil

To change your will in New York with a codicil, you prepare a short written amendment that identifies the original will, states the specific changes you want, and is then signed and witnessed under the exact same formalities required for a will under New York Estates, Powers and Trusts Law (EPTL) §3-2.1 — at least […]

How to Choose an Executor for Your New York Will

To choose an executor for your New York will, name a trustworthy, financially organized adult who is willing to serve, who can realistically commit the months (often a year or more) the job takes, and who is eligible to receive “letters testamentary” from the Surrogate’s Court. The best choice balances three things — character, capacity, […]

What Happens If You Die Without a Will in New York?

If you die without a will in New York, the state writes one for you. Under the intestacy rules in EPTL Article 4, your property passes to a fixed list of relatives in a fixed order — your spouse, children, parents, siblings, and more distant kin — with no regard for what you actually wanted, […]

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 […]