New York has one of the most comprehensive and nuanced estate law frameworks in the United States. Understanding the EPTL, SCPA, New York estate tax, intestacy rules, and trust law is essential for protecting your family. Morgan Legal Group guides New York clients through every aspect of state estate law.
New York's estate law framework is codified primarily in two statutes: the Estates, Powers and Trusts Law (EPTL), which governs the creation and administration of wills, trusts, and the rights of beneficiaries; and the Surrogate's Court Procedure Act (SCPA), which governs the procedural rules of New York's Surrogate's Courts — the specialized courts that handle probate, estate administration, and trust proceedings. Together, these statutes — supplemented by the New York Tax Law's estate tax provisions, the General Obligations Law's power of attorney rules, and the Public Health Law's health care proxy provisions — create a comprehensive body of law that affects every New York estate, no matter the size.
New York's estate laws have been shaped by decades of legislative reform and court decisions. The state adopted the Estates, Powers and Trusts Law in 1966, replacing the prior Decedent Estate Law, and has amended it numerous times since. Major recent changes include the 2021 overhaul of the Power of Attorney Law (requiring more specific authorization language and a more formal execution process), periodic updates to the estate tax exemption and rates, and ongoing legislative consideration of further reforms to bring New York's trust law in line with modern best practices.
For New York residents, understanding the key provisions of state estate law is not merely academic — it determines who inherits your estate if you die without a will, how much estate tax your family will owe, what rights your surviving spouse has regardless of your will's provisions, and how your trustee must invest and distribute trust assets. Russel Morgan, Esq. and Morgan Legal Group keep their clients informed of changes in New York estate law and update estate plans proactively when legislative changes affect the client's planning. Serving Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, the Bronx, Staten Island, Nassau, Westchester, and Suffolk counties.
Governs wills, intestacy, trusts, powers of appointment, and the rights of beneficiaries. Articles 3 (wills), 4 (intestacy), 5 (rights of spouse/children), 7 (trusts), and 11 (fiduciary duties) are most critical for estate planning.
Governs probate proceedings, estate administration, appointment of fiduciaries, kinship hearings, accountings, and all matters before New York's five county-based Surrogate's Courts.
Imposes state estate tax on NY-domiciled decedents with estates exceeding $6.94 million (2024), with the notorious 'cliff' that taxes the entire estate once 105% of the exemption is exceeded. Rates: 3.06%–16%.
Governing the New York Statutory Short Form Power of Attorney. Requires the principal to initial each category of power granted and sign before a notary. Gift rider must be separately executed for gift-making authority.
Allows New York adults to designate a health care agent to make medical decisions if they become incapacitated. Agent's authority activates upon the attending physician's determination of incapacity.
Guarantees a surviving spouse the right to elect against the will and claim the greater of $50,000 or one-third of the net estate, regardless of what the will provides. Must be exercised within statutory deadlines.
Distributes the estate of a person who dies without a valid will according to a priority order: spouse and children share first; then parents, siblings, and more remote relatives in order of proximity.
Requires the testator to sign at the end of the will, declare it to two witnesses, and have both witnesses sign within 30 days of each other. The witnesses must be competent and ideally disinterested.
Additional resources: morganlegalny.com — Estate Planning Overview
Russel Morgan, Esq. provides clear, practical guidance on all aspects of New York estate law. Serving all five boroughs and surrounding counties since 2000.
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