A few months ago, a man came into my Manhattan office with a binder. Inside was a set of documents he’d purchased from a national website for a few hundred dollars. He was proud of his foresight. He believed he had created a valid revocable trust and protected his family—and his Brooklyn brownstone—from the delays and costs of Surrogate’s Court. He was wrong.
The documents were signed, but not properly witnessed or notarized according to New York law. More importantly, not a single asset was ever actually transferred into the trust. His bank accounts, his investments, and the deed to his home were all still in his individual name. If he had passed away the next day, his family would have been left with a worthless binder and a full probate proceeding. His attempt to save a few thousand dollars would have cost his estate tens of thousands and months of delay.
This is a story I see far too often. The promise of a quick, cheap, and easy online trust is compelling, but it overlooks a fundamental truth. A trust is not a form you fill out. It is a carefully constructed legal entity designed for the stewardship of your legacy.
The Difference Between a Document and a Plan
The core misunderstanding promoted by do-it-yourself legal websites is that the signed paper is the finished product. In reality, the trust agreement is just the beginning—the blueprint for a structure you have yet to build. Creating a trust that works involves two critical steps that online templates cannot perform: legal counsel and asset funding.
First, the counsel. A trust must be deliberately designed around your specific family dynamics, asset types, and long-term goals. Does your son have a creditor problem? Is your daughter in a rocky marriage? Do you own a business that requires a succession plan? A generic template cannot ask these questions. It cannot advise you on selecting the right trustee—a person or institution with a serious fiduciary duty to manage your affairs. It cannot build in contingency plans for what happens if your first-choice trustee is unable or unwilling to serve.
Without this guidance, the document you create may be legally valid but practically useless, or worse, create unintended consequences that spark conflict among your heirs.
New York’s Strict Formalities for Trusts
Beyond the strategic design, a trust must comply with specific legal requirements to be recognized by the courts. In New York, these rules are not suggestions. Failure to follow them can render the entire trust invalid.
For instance, New York Estates, Powers and Trusts Law (EPTL) § 7-1.17 requires that any lifetime trust be in writing and executed with the same formality as a deed. This means the grantor’s signature must be acknowledged before a notary public. We have seen online documents that provide no instructions for this, or provide incorrect instructions that don’t satisfy the statute. An improperly executed trust is no trust at all. The assets it was meant to protect are left exposed, as if the document never existed.
The most common point of failure, however, is funding. A trust only controls the assets that are legally titled in its name. For real estate, this requires preparing and recording a new deed. For bank and brokerage accounts, it requires opening new accounts in the name of the trust and transferring the funds. For business interests, it requires formally assigning your ownership interest. A website cannot do this for you. It is a detailed, hands-on process that is the cornerstone of a successful plan. An empty trust is merely a set of instructions with nothing to control.
The True Cost of a DIY Trust
The initial appeal of an online trust is its low cost. But when a poorly drafted or unfunded trust fails, the costs to your family can be immense. Instead of a smooth, private administration, they are thrown into a public probate process in Surrogate’s Court. The estate will have to hire an attorney to clean up the mess, and the legal fees for that work will dwarf the cost of establishing a proper plan from the start.
The greater cost, however, is not financial. It is the emotional toll on a grieving family forced to deal with a confusing and frustrating court process you intended for them to avoid. It is the potential for disputes when your wishes are unclear or legally unenforceable. The goal of estate planning is to transfer not just your assets, but your values—to leave a legacy of care and intention. A flawed document created without professional guidance puts that entire legacy at risk.
Stewardship. That is what a well-crafted estate plan provides. It is a deliberate act of protecting your family and preserving what you have built. This is not something that can be automated or downloaded.
If you have already created a trust using an online service, it is not too late. We can review your documents and asset titling to identify any legal defects or strategic gaps. Contact my office to schedule a trust validity and funding assessment.




