A client recently came to my office with a will he’d drafted online. “I’m all set, right?” he asked, relieved to have checked a major item off his to-do list. He was surprised by my answer. While a will is essential, it only addresses what happens after you’re gone. It leaves a tremendous gap for the years leading up to that moment—a period where you might be unable to speak for yourself.
True estate planning isn’t about a single document. It is about building a structure to protect your family and your assets during your lifetime and beyond. It’s about intentional stewardship. In my practice, this structure rests on five distinct pillars.
The Blueprint for Your Assets: Wills and Trusts
A Last Will and Testament is the foundational blueprint. It names an executor to settle your affairs, designates guardians for minor children, and outlines how your property should be distributed. Without a will, New York State law decides for you, and those decisions rarely align with a family’s specific wishes.
For many families, however, a will alone is not enough. A will must pass through Surrogate’s Court in a public process called probate, which can be time-consuming and costly. This is why we use trusts. A trust is a private agreement that allows a trustee—someone you choose—to manage assets for your beneficiaries. A properly funded revocable living trust, for example, allows your estate to bypass probate entirely. It saves your family time, money, and the stress of a court proceeding, providing a seamless transition of control. Stewardship.
Directives for Life, Not Just Death
You are far more likely to become incapacitated than to die suddenly. The documents that protect you during your lifetime are just as critical as a will.
We build this protection with three key instruments:
- Durable Power of Attorney: This document appoints an agent to manage your financial life if you cannot. Without it, your family would need to petition a court to have a guardian appointed—an expensive and burdensome process. New York’s statutory form for this power is specific, as outlined in General Obligations Law § 5-1513. An outdated form can be rejected by financial institutions precisely when your family needs it most.
- Health Care Proxy: This appoints an agent to make medical decisions on your behalf. You grant them the authority to speak with doctors and make choices based on your known wishes. This simple document can prevent agonizing family disputes in a hospital waiting room.
- Living Will: This document states your wishes regarding end-of-life care, such as the use of life-sustaining treatment. It provides clear guidance to your health care agent and physicians, relieving them of a heavy burden and ensuring your voice is heard.
Together, these documents form your contingency plan for incapacity, giving your chosen fiduciaries the legal authority to act on your behalf without court intervention.
The Most Personal Decision: Naming a Guardian
For my clients with minor children, no decision weighs more heavily than who would raise them if the parents were no longer there. Naming a guardian in your will is the only way to make your choice legally binding. If you fail to do so, a judge in Surrogate’s Court will make that decision. A judge who has never met you, your children, or your family will decide your children’s future.
This is not just about choosing a person. It’s about providing them with the financial resources to care for your children without hardship. We often structure a trust to hold the children’s inheritance, managed by a trustee who can make distributions for their health, education, and welfare until they are old enough to manage the funds themselves.
Preserving Your Legacy from Taxes
The fifth pillar is prudent tax planning. New York has its own estate tax, separate from the federal estate tax. For 2024, the New York State exemption is $6.94 million per person. If your estate’s value exceeds this threshold, the tax can be significant. With proper planning—often using specific types of trusts like irrevocable life insurance trusts (ILITs) or spousal lifetime access trusts (SLATs)—it is possible to reduce or even eliminate this liability. This isn’t about hiding money; it’s about strategically arranging your affairs so more of your life’s work passes to your family, not to the state.
A complete plan addresses all five of these pillars. It creates a framework that works not just at death, but through any period of incapacity. It protects your children, preserves your assets, and provides a clear road map for the people you trust. It transforms a simple will into a true legacy.
The first step is often an honest assessment of what you currently have in place. We reserve time each week to conduct a 30-minute document review for individuals and families who need clarity on their current plan—or lack thereof.





