The story about Walt Disney being cryogenically frozen is a persistent urban legend. It’s also false—his remains were cremated in 1966. Yet, the question it raises comes up in my practice more often than you might think. A client, often successful in technology or finance, will sit across from me in my Manhattan office and ask, “Can I put instructions for my own cryopreservation in my will?”
The immediate legal answer is straightforward. The practical answer—the one dealing with family, finance, and fiduciary duty—is far more involved. Directing your post-mortem arrangements is a fundamental part of estate planning. An unconventional request like cryonics, however, requires more than a simple clause in a will. It demands a deliberate, well-funded, and legally fortified structure to have any chance of being carried out.
Your Right to Direct Your Final Arrangements in New York
In New York, every adult has the right to determine the disposition of their own remains. This right is not just tradition—it is codified in law. New York Public Health Law § 4201 grants a person the authority to direct the disposition of their body in a written instrument. This instrument is typically a will, but it can also be a standalone document signed with the same formality.
This statute is the legal bedrock for any specific final wishes, whether burial at sea, cremation, or cryopreservation. A legal right, however, is not a guarantee of execution. An instruction in a will is only as effective as the executor’s ability and willingness to carry it out. If the instruction is ambiguous, unfunded, or likely to be challenged by family, it can become a source of protracted conflict in Surrogate’s Court.
For something as unusual as cryopreservation, simply stating the wish is insufficient. Your executor has a fiduciary duty to follow the instructions in your will. But they also have a duty to be a prudent steward of the estate’s assets. If carrying out your wish would bankrupt the estate or the instructions are unclear, an executor could petition the court for guidance, opening the door for family members to object.
Funding the Directive: The Trust Is a Better Tool than the Will
Cryopreservation is not a one-time expense. The initial procedure is costly, and indefinite storage requires a significant, ongoing financial commitment. Leaving this to be paid from your general estate assets after your death is a recipe for failure.
Here, we move beyond the will and into more effective planning. A will is a public document that goes through probate, which can be slow. By the time your executor has access to the estate’s funds, the window for cryopreservation may have closed. A far better approach is to fund these arrangements outside of the probate estate, typically through a trust.
We often use an Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust (ILIT) for this purpose. The trust owns a life insurance policy on you. Upon your death, the proceeds are paid directly to the trust—instantly and outside of probate. The trustee, who you have chosen for this specific purpose, then has immediate access to the funds to pay the cryonics facility and establish the long-term endowment required for maintenance. This isolates the funds and the directive from the rest of your estate, protecting it from challenges and delays.
This is the difference between writing down a wish and creating an actionable, funded plan. It is an act of intentional stewardship, ensuring the necessary resources are in place for your fiduciaries to fulfill their duties without ambiguity.
The Human Element: Preparing Your Family for Unconventional Wishes
Even with a perfect legal and financial structure, a human component remains that no document can fully resolve. An unconventional wish can be emotionally jarring for a grieving family. They may see it as eccentric or a waste of generational assets. This can lead to challenges against the will or trust, often on the grounds of diminished capacity or undue influence.
While a well-drafted plan can withstand these challenges, the emotional toll on the family is a real consideration. Part of my role as counsel is to discuss the “why” behind a client’s decisions. We often draft a separate letter of intent—not a legally binding document, but a personal one—that explains the reasoning behind the choice. This letter, addressed to the family, can provide context and soften the blow.
Preparing your family for your wishes is as important as preparing the legal documents. The goal of a good estate plan is not just the orderly transfer of assets, but the preservation of family harmony. The Walt Disney myth persists because it touches on a fascination with legacy and immortality. In reality, a legacy is built on deliberate planning that accounts for both legal procedure and human emotion.
If your estate plan includes highly specific or unconventional instructions, the first step is to review whether the legal and financial structures in place are sufficient to see them through. We can schedule a session to analyze your existing documents and identify potential points of failure before they become a problem for your family and your executor.




