The short answer is yes. For the vast majority of people, online estate planning is completely legal, valid, and appropriate. Here is how to know which category you fall into.
LegalZoom built a billion-dollar company on a simple premise: the law allows non-attorneys to help people create legal documents through document assembly. Courts have consistently upheld this. You do not need a lawyer to have a legally valid Will in any of the 50 states.
This is the same model DocSats uses. The platform generates state-specific documents based on your answers. You execute them correctly. The resulting document is legally valid. Attorneys draft custom documents; document assembly platforms generate them from legally validated templates.
The federal estate tax exemption in 2026 is $13.61 million per individual. If your estate exceeds this, estate tax planning becomes complex and consequential.
Children from multiple relationships, step-children, a spouse from a second marriage alongside children from your first. These situations may warrant a customized approach.
If you own a business and need to plan for what happens to it, this involves both estate planning and business law.
If you want to leave assets to someone who receives government benefits, a direct inheritance can disqualify them. A Special Needs Trust requires careful drafting.
Creating a Will online is easy. Executing it correctly is where people fail. Every state has specific requirements: how many witnesses you need, whether witnesses can be beneficiaries, whether a notary is required. An incorrectly executed Will can be challenged in probate or thrown out entirely.
Good online platforms include state-specific execution instructions with every document. DocSats does. Read them. Follow them exactly.
DocSats creates legally valid estate planning documents for all 50 states. Under an hour. State-specific execution instructions included. Starting at $179.99.
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