The False Security of a Click-Through Will
A client came to us after his father—a successful architect in Manhattan—passed away. The son brought in a will he had found in his father’s desk, printed from a popular online legal document website. On the surface, it looked official. It had signature lines, witness blocks, and clear instructions for distributing the estate. The son felt relieved. He believed his father had taken care of everything.
That relief vanished when we explained the high probability that the will would be rejected by the New York Surrogate’s Court. The witnesses, a neighbor and a mail carrier, had signed on different days. The self-proving affidavit was incomplete. The document hadn’t been supervised by an attorney who could testify to the father’s capacity and freedom from duress. The son’s simple probate process was about to become a costly, year-long legal battle to prove the will’s validity—a battle that could have been avoided entirely.
This is the hidden cost of do-it-yourself estate planning. These online platforms sell documents, not legal counsel. They provide a template, but they cannot provide the stewardship required to ensure your intentions become a legally binding reality.
The Execution Ceremony: More Than Just a Signature
In my practice, I’ve seen the damage improperly executed documents cause. Families are torn apart by litigation over simple, avoidable mistakes. Creating a will is not just about writing down your wishes—it is about memorializing them in a way that satisfies the law’s strict demands.
New York’s Estates, Powers and Trusts Law (EPTL) § 3-2.1 outlines the formal requirements for executing a will. We call this the “will execution ceremony.” The person making the will—the testator—must sign it at the end. They must also declare to at least two witnesses that the document they are signing is their will. Those two witnesses must then sign their names and addresses within 30 days of each other, all in the testator’s presence.
An online form cannot replicate this ceremony. It cannot ensure the witnesses are present at the same time, that the testator is of sound mind and free from coercion, or that the statutory language is followed precisely. Without an experienced attorney supervising this process, you are leaving the validity of your entire legacy to chance. A judge in Surrogate’s Court will not care if the website had good reviews. They will only care if the letter of the law was followed. If it wasn’t, the court may declare the will invalid and distribute your assets as if you had died without one.
An Algorithm Cannot Be Your Fiduciary
The most significant gap in online estate planning isn’t the software—it’s the absence of a fiduciary. A fiduciary is a person or institution with a legal and ethical duty to act in your best interest. As your attorney, I have a fiduciary duty to you. A website does not. It cannot ask probing questions or exercise professional judgment.
A template cannot ask if your son has a gambling problem that might require his inheritance be placed in a trust. It cannot advise on the best way to provide for a child with special needs without jeopardizing their government benefits. It cannot structure a plan for a family-owned business or handle the complexities of a second marriage with children from a prior relationship.
This is where the real work of estate planning lies. It is a process of discovery and intentional design. We discuss your family dynamics, your financial picture, and your deepest concerns for the future. We plan for contingencies—what happens if your chosen guardian passes away? What if your trustee is not financially responsible? The plan we build is a direct result of these conversations. The documents are merely the tools we use to implement that plan. An online service sells you the tool but abandons you on the job site.
The True Cost of a “Convenient” Plan
The appeal of an online will is its low upfront cost. A few hundred dollars seems far more reasonable than engaging a law firm. But this is a dangerous illusion. The true cost of an estate plan is not what you pay to create it, but what your family will pay—in money, time, and emotional distress—if it fails.
A will contest in Surrogate’s Court can easily cost a family tens of thousands of dollars in legal fees, draining the very inheritance the will was meant to protect. The process can drag on for years, freezing assets and preventing your beneficiaries from receiving what is rightfully theirs. The emotional toll on a grieving family forced into litigation is immeasurable.
Prudent estate planning is an investment in your family’s future stability. It is an act of stewardship, designed to make a difficult time simpler and more secure for the people you love. The goal is to create a clear, legally resilient plan that functions exactly as you intended, without the need for court intervention or family disputes. That result is not something you can download.
If you have created a will or trust using an online service, you may have a valid document. But you may also have a false sense of security. A legal review can confirm whether your documents are sound or identify critical flaws before they become a problem for your family.
If you are concerned about the validity of documents you’ve prepared online, our firm offers a one-hour review to analyze them under New York law and outline any potential vulnerabilities.



