A client recently came to my office with a neatly bound document he created on a national legal website. He was proud to have taken a major step in his estate planning, believing he had protected his family and his business. The difficult part of my job was explaining that the trust he paid for—the one he was counting on—was unenforceable in New York. The execution was flawed, and the language failed to account for state-specific law. He had purchased a document, not a strategy.
The appeal of these do-it-yourself online services is understandable. They promise a fast, inexpensive alternative to working with a law firm. But a trust is not a simple commodity. It is a foundational instrument of stewardship, designed to function under a specific legal framework. When that instrument is built on a generic template, it often fails when it is needed most.
The Formality of a New York Trust
One of the most common points of failure for an online trust is improper execution. In New York, creating a valid lifetime trust is not as simple as signing a piece of paper. The law is explicit. Under Estates, Powers and Trusts Law (EPTL) §7-1.17, any lifetime trust must be in writing and executed with the same formality as a deed. This means it must be signed by the grantor and at least one trustee before a notary public.
A website’s generic instructions might not emphasize this, or they might provide conflicting advice based on the laws of another state. I have seen documents signed without witnesses, without a notary, or with digital signatures that do not hold up in Surrogate’s Court. These are not minor clerical errors—they can invalidate the entire trust, throwing the assets back into the probate process the trust was created to avoid. The court does not make exceptions for good intentions. The law requires a specific procedure, and a checklist on a website is no substitute for supervised execution.
When a National Template Fails a New York Family
Beyond the legal formalities, the substance of a template-based trust is often its greatest weakness. These documents are designed to be a one-size-fits-all product for a national audience. But estate law is intensely local. A plan that works in California or Florida can create significant problems here.
Consider the ownership of a Manhattan co-op, for example. Transferring co-op shares into a trust is a specialized process involving the co-op board’s approval and specific proprietary lease assignments. A generic online trust will not contain the necessary provisions to address this, potentially leading to a failed transfer. Similarly, New York has distinct rules regarding a spouse’s “right of election,” creditor protection, and the administration of trusts for beneficiaries with special needs. A generic document cannot account for these nuances.
Your legacy is not generic. It is the product of a lifetime of work, specific relationships, and unique assets. The legal instrument designed to protect it must be equally specific. Stewardship.
The Irreplaceable Role of Counsel
The most critical failure of an online form is that it cannot provide legal advice. It cannot ask follow-up questions. It cannot assess your family’s dynamics or help you select the right person to serve as trustee. Choosing a trustee is one of the most important decisions you will make. This individual or institution will have a fiduciary duty—the highest duty of loyalty recognized by law—to manage the trust assets for the benefit of your heirs.
An online form cannot help you weigh the prudence of appointing a family member versus a corporate trustee. It cannot build in provisions for a successor trustee if your first choice is unable to serve. It cannot advise you on how to structure the trust to protect a beneficiary from their own poor judgment or from creditors. This is the work of counsel—to understand the human element and build a deliberate, intentional plan that anticipates and mitigates future conflict.
A trust is more than words on a page. It is a set of instructions for the people you leave behind, intended to function for years or even generations. The perceived savings of a DIY trust are often a false economy, paid for later by your family in legal fees, taxes, and disputes in court.
If you have created a trust using an online service or are considering doing so, we offer a professional review of the document. We can identify its potential points of failure under New York law and discuss how to create an instrument that truly reflects your intentions and protects your legacy.





