Florida Estate Planning

Wills from $499. Complete plans from From $799.

Protect your family and your legacy with a Florida-compliant estate plan drafted by a licensed attorney. Flat-fee pricing. No surprises.

Start with a Will

Estate Planning, Done Right

Estate planning is not just for the wealthy or the elderly. Every Florida adult should have at least three documents: a Last Will and Testament, a Durable Power of Attorney, and a Designation of Healthcare Surrogate. These documents tell the world who decides for you when you cannot, who inherits your property, and who cares for your minor children. Without them, the state decides under Florida's intestacy and guardianship statutes - and the answer is rarely the one you would have chosen.

We have built three flat-fee estate planning packages so Floridians can choose the right level of protection for their stage of life. SnapTestament™ at $499 delivers a complete basic estate package: will, power of attorney, healthcare surrogate, and living will. VirtualHeirloom™ from From $799 adds a revocable living trust and a comprehensive digital estate plan for clients with more complex assets. Our Power of Attorney Package at $249 is for clients who already have a will but need their incapacity documents in order.

Every document is drafted by Jonathan D. Woods, Esq. - a licensed Florida attorney with thirty years of legal experience. Florida-compliant. Flat fee. No retainer surprises.

  • Florida-compliant Last Will and Testament drafted by a licensed attorney
  • Designation of Personal Representative and guardians for minor children
  • Healthcare Surrogate, Living Will, and Durable Power of Attorney
  • Optional revocable living trust to avoid probate
  • Digital asset provisions under Florida's RUFADAA statute (Ch. 740)
  • Self-proving affidavit and execution instructions for Florida statutory compliance

Choose Your Estate Plan

SnapTestament™ - Complete Estate Package

$499

Last Will, Power of Attorney, Healthcare Surrogate, and Living Will. Florida-compliant, attorney-drafted, 72-hour turnaround.

  • Last Will & Testament
  • Durable POA
  • Healthcare Surrogate
  • Living Will
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Power of Attorney Package

$249

Standalone Durable POA, Healthcare Surrogate, Living Will, and HIPAA Release. For clients who already have a will.

  • Durable POA
  • Healthcare Surrogate
  • Living Will
  • HIPAA Release
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VirtualHeirloom™ - Complete Estate Plan

From $799

Revocable living trust, pour-over will, full powers package, and a comprehensive RUFADAA-compliant digital estate plan.

  • Revocable Trust
  • Pour-Over Will
  • Full Powers Package
  • Digital Asset Plan
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Free: Digital Estate Organizer

Before you draft a will, organize the information your fiduciaries will need. Our free Digital Estate Organizer walks you through accounts, assets, beneficiaries, and executor notes - and produces a branded PDF you can keep alongside your estate plan.

Start the Free Organizer

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Read our deep-dive guide on comprehensive estate planning for physical and digital assets, or see how a simple Florida will works. For incapacity-only documents, see our Power of Attorney Package.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I really need a will if I live in Florida?

If you die without a will in Florida, your estate is distributed under Florida's intestacy statute (Fla. Stat. Ch. 732, Part I). The state decides who inherits your property, who serves as Personal Representative, and who serves as guardian for your minor children. A properly drafted will lets you make those decisions yourself, designate an alternate Personal Representative, name guardians, and direct specific bequests. For most Florida residents, a will is the single most cost-effective estate planning document.

What is the difference between a will and a revocable living trust?

A will takes effect at death and goes through probate. A revocable living trust is created during your lifetime, holds title to assets you transfer into it, and passes those assets to beneficiaries outside of probate. Trusts can save time and cost in administration, provide privacy, and allow continuity in incapacity. Many Florida estate plans combine a revocable trust with a pour-over will. We discuss which structure fits during the engagement.

What documents make up a complete Florida estate plan?

A complete plan typically includes: (1) Last Will and Testament with self-proving affidavit, (2) Durable Power of Attorney, (3) Designation of Healthcare Surrogate, (4) Living Will / Advance Directive, (5) HIPAA Release, and for many clients, (6) a Revocable Living Trust, and (7) a digital asset inventory under RUFADAA. Our SnapTestament™ covers items 1-4. VirtualHeirloom™ covers all of the above.

Are your wills valid in Florida?

Yes. Every will we draft is prepared to comply with Fla. Stat. Ch. 732, including the witness and notarization requirements for self-proving affidavits under Fla. Stat. §732.503. We include execution instructions so the document is signed correctly. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes; proper execution depends on following the instructions provided.

Do you handle digital assets like crypto, online accounts, and gaming?

Yes. Florida adopted the Revised Uniform Fiduciary Access to Digital Assets Act (RUFADAA) at Fla. Stat. Ch. 740. Our estate planning packages include RUFADAA-compliant provisions that authorize your fiduciary to access your digital assets. For a more comprehensive digital estate plan, see our SnapHeirs™ digital estate plan or VirtualHeirloom™.

Where can I start collecting my information?

Use our free Digital Estate Organizer to inventory your accounts, beneficiaries, and assets. The output is a branded PDF you can keep with your other estate planning documents and provide to your attorney when you are ready to draft your plan.

Ready to Build Your Florida Estate Plan?

Flat-fee packages from $499. Pay online - funds held in trust until delivery.

Get Started

Not sure which package fits? Contact us - we will recommend the right plan.

Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. Florida law governs all engagements. Out-of-state matters may be referred to qualified counsel.