Wills & Trusts

How to Create a Will in New York

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I've reviewed a lot of wills that didn't work. Handwritten wills, online template wills, wills signed without proper witnesses, wills where the testator signed the wrong line. Every one of them created a problem someone had to solve in probate court — usually at significant expense and family stress. Getting a will right costs less than getting it wrong.

Who Can Make a Will in New York?

New York's Estates, Powers and Trusts Law (EPTL § 3-1.1) sets the minimum requirements for making a will. You must be at least 18 years old and of "sound mind and memory" — what lawyers call testamentary capacity. Sound mind doesn't mean perfect mental health. It means four things: you understand the nature of making a will, you know the general nature and extent of your property, you know the natural objects of your bounty (your family), and you understand how your will distributes your property.

Alzheimer's disease, dementia, or cognitive decline doesn't automatically disqualify someone from making a will — if they have lucid intervals, a will executed during a lucid period can be valid. But mental capacity at the time of execution is a question that comes up in will contests, which is why documentation matters for elderly testators. We discuss this more in our guide to contesting a will in New York.

New York Will Execution Requirements

New York's will execution requirements under EPTL § 3-2.1 are strict. A will that doesn't satisfy these requirements is invalid — full stop. No amount of good intentions or clear meaning saves a will that wasn't properly executed. This is where many self-prepared wills fail.

The Requirements

About Notarization: New York does NOT require wills to be notarized. Notarization doesn't validate a will and doesn't substitute for the two-witness requirement. However, a self-proving affidavit — which IS notarized — can streamline the probate process by eliminating the need to locate witnesses after the testator dies. Including one is smart practice.

Step-by-Step: Creating Your Will

Step 1: Take Stock of Your Assets

Before drafting anything, you need a clear picture of what you own. This means listing financial accounts (checking, savings, investments, retirement accounts), real property, business interests, vehicles, valuable personal property, and life insurance policies. You don't describe every item in your will — that level of detail creates amendment headaches every time you buy or sell something. But you need to understand your estate before you can decide how to distribute it.

Identify which assets will pass through your will and which won't. Assets with named beneficiaries — IRAs, 401(k)s, life insurance — don't go through the will. Neither do jointly owned assets. Your will controls what's left: individually owned assets without beneficiary designations.

Step 2: Decide What Your Will Should Do

A will can accomplish several things beyond basic property distribution. Think through each category:

Step 3: Draft the Will

This is where DIY approaches most frequently break down. Drafting requires understanding New York law on several specific issues: how to properly describe beneficiaries and their shares, how to handle contingencies (what if a beneficiary predeceases you?), how to structure trusts within the will, how to avoid inadvertently disinheriting a spouse under New York's right of election, and how to include the appropriate executor authority provisions.

New York's right of election means a surviving spouse can elect against the will to receive a statutory share — the greater of $50,000 or one-third of the net estate — even if the will leaves them less. If you're married and want to leave specific assets to children or others, this needs to be accounted for in the planning.

Step 4: Execute the Will Properly

Execution ceremony is what transforms a document into a legal will. The steps:

  1. The testator should review the complete will and confirm it reflects their wishes before signing.
  2. In the presence of two witnesses, the testator states that the document is their will (this is "publication").
  3. The testator signs at the end of the document, or acknowledges a prior signature to each witness.
  4. Each witness signs the will, ideally in the presence of the testator and each other, within 30 days of the testator's signature.
  5. If a self-proving affidavit is being prepared, the testator and witnesses sign the affidavit in the presence of a notary public.

Don't have the witnesses sign in advance. Don't have the testator sign alone and then "show" the witnesses later. Don't use interested witnesses if it can be avoided. The sequence matters, and errors in execution are the number one reason wills fail probate review.

Step 5: Store the Will Safely

The original will must be preserved. In New York, only the original will — not a copy — can be admitted to probate without additional legal proceedings. A will filed with the clerk of any New York Surrogate's Court during the testator's lifetime is preserved for safekeeping and returned upon request. This is worth doing, especially for people who move frequently or lack secure storage at home.

Tell your executor where the will is kept. An executor who can't find the original will after the testator's death faces significant complications — including the possibility that the estate will be administered as if no will existed.

What Your Will Can't Do

Some things a will cannot accomplish, regardless of how it's drafted:

Common Will Mistakes in New York

The most frequent errors I see in wills that families bring to my office for review:

Does Everyone Need an Attorney to Make a Will?

New York doesn't require an attorney to make a will. A carefully prepared, properly executed will created without an attorney is legally valid. But the practical reality is that most people who attempt to draft their own wills don't fully understand New York's execution requirements, don't account for the interaction between the will and beneficiary designations, and don't anticipate contingencies that can unravel the plan.

For straightforward situations — single person, no children, modest assets, clear distribution plan — a well-reviewed template with proper execution may be adequate. For married couples, people with children (especially minor children), people with business interests, people with real estate, and anyone with an estate that might approach New York's estate tax exemption, attorney drafting isn't a luxury. It's insurance against a much more expensive problem later.

Our guide to estate planning costs in New York provides realistic fee expectations. For the bigger picture of what a complete estate plan should include, see our New York estate planning checklist.

Additional guidance on New York will requirements is available through Morgan Legal NY's wills resource page.


Get Your Will Done Right

A properly drafted and executed will is the foundation of every estate plan. Let's make sure yours is valid, complete, and does exactly what you intend.

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Russel Morgan, Esq. — Founding Partner, Morgan Legal Group
Russel Morgan, Esq.
Founding Partner — Morgan Legal Group, P.C.

Russel Morgan is the founding partner of Morgan Legal Group with over 20 years of experience in New York estate planning, probate, and elder law. A graduate of New York Law School and LLOYD's of London, he has guided more than 5,000 families through complex legal matters. Russel is rated 10.0 on Justia, A+ by the BBB, and is a member of the Forbes Business Council.

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The information contained in this article is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Reading this article does not create an attorney-client relationship. Prior results do not guarantee similar outcomes. Morgan Legal Group, P.C. is a New York law firm.