A Last Will is a great start to your estate plan.
We offer the next steps after a Last Will as part of our Estate Plan Bundle. Save time, money, and protect your family and loved ones with this special offer.
Living Will vs Last Will
We know that the similarity between the names of different estate planning documents can be confusing. A living will sometimes is confused with a last will. A living will is a simple document in which you state your wishes for life support and other types of medical care. A last will is a document in which you spell out what you'd like to happen when you pass away. You appoint guardians for children, beneficiaries for assets, and someone to manage your estate.
We offer both documents, along with a Power of Attorney, as part of our Estate Plan Bundle. Save time, money, and protect your family and loved ones with this special offer.
We know that the similarity between the names of different estate planning documents can be confusing. A living will sometimes is confused with a last will. A living will is a simple document in which you state your wishes for life support and other types of medical care. A last will is a document in which you spell out what you'd like to happen when you pass away. You appoint guardians for children, beneficiaries for assets, and someone to manage your estate.
We offer both documents, along with a Power of Attorney, as part of our Estate Plan Bundle. Save time, money, and protect your family and loved ones with this special offer.
Estate Plan Bundle with Attorney Advice
- A year of attorney advice, to discuss, review, and confirm your estate plan with an independent attorney. Make any updates for a year for free.*
- A last will, to state who gets your assets when you pass away and to name guardians for your minor children.
- A living will, so you can specify instructions about life support and medical care.
- A power of attorney, to name someone to handle your financial and legal affairs if you can't.
Bundle special offers start at $249 –
Save up to 34%
Just the Last Will
- Only a last will, to state who gets your assets when you pass away and to name guardians for your minor children.
- Only a living trust, to state who gets your assets when you pass away and to name guardians for your minor children.
- Only a living will, so you can specify instructions about life support and medical care.
- Only a power of attorney, to name someone to handle your financial and legal affairs if you can't.