Estate Lawyer


Estate law is regulated by state and federal government. At the state level, these laws cover living wills, trust creation, and probate. State and federal laws regulate taxes placed on recipients of property from an estate. Estate law also controls the creation of living wills, which let individuals dictate their desired healthcare if they become too sick or injured to make decisions on their own.

States have considerable autonomy with estate laws, but there is a Uniform Probate Code (UPC) that seeks to clarify and unify estate laws nationwide. Estate planning law also covers the creation of wills, the resolving of probate cases, and situations involving power of attorney.

Lawyer.com provides resources for you to connect with an estate planning lawyer in your area. Browse our directory below.


Free Help: Use This Form or Call 800-620-0900

Member Representative

Call me for fastest results!
800-620-0900

Free Help: Use This Form or Call 800-620-0900

By submitting this lawyer request, I confirm I have read and agree to the Consent to Receive Messages from all messaging and voice technologies including Email, Text, Phone, Terms of Use, and Privacy Policy. Information provided is not privileged or confidential.


TIPS

Find Estate Lawyers and Estate Law Firms. Find Estate attorneys by state or refine by specific Estate practice areas such as Estate Planning, Trusts, Wills & Probate and Power of Attorney matters.

Estate Legal Articles

Legal articles on Lawyer.com, Written by legal experts, are a great resource for learning more about Estate. Find more legal articles


Test article

test test

What creditors have priority in a florida probate?

This article focuses on the priority of creditors during a probate proceeding.

Medicaid eligibility and the florida lady bird deed

This article focuses on Lady Bird Deeds and if they affect medicaid eligibility.

Asset protection by design

Most of the time people believe that their estate is all “set-up,” even though most of the time it is not. It’s just the process of having gone to an attorney for a plan, like the couple above. Much of the failure of estate planning is the misunderstanding of consequences. Often, a legal hearing is required to take control over family member’s financial and medical decisions when planning is no longer possible. Probate is the court procedure that interprets the Last Will and Testament or follows the rules of asset transfers when the documents aren’t available. Probate could easily be avoided through proper estate planning. The following documents are covered under the definition of basic estate planning. 1. Power of Attorney; this is the document that provides authority to enable others to make financial decisions for the benefit of the one who set-up the Power of Attorney. 2. Health Care Surrogate; This is the document that provides authority to a trusted party to make health care decisions for the benefit of the grantor if and when unable to make such decisions. 3. Living Will; This is the document that provides authority to enable a trusted party to make end-of-life decisions. 4. Revocable (Living) Trust; this is a document that control’s how assets are to be handled during one’s lifetime and after death. The trust-maker has the ability to make changes during one’s life. 5. Last Will and Testament. This is the document that handles assets at death and assets that are not properly funded by the trust through the court process called probate.

Protect your family

Prepare a will or trust AND financial and medical powers to protect your family in the event of your disability or death. We can help.

Probate litigation

A brief summary about Probate Litigation.

General questions and answers about probate

These are some basic questions and answers about Probate.

The basics of revocable (living) trusts in california

THE BASICS OF REVOCABLE (LIVING) TRUSTS IN CALIFORNIA

The basics of wills and probate in california

The Basics Of Wills And Probate In California