A widow in Brooklyn recently brought me a stack of papers her late husband had printed from a popular legal website. He had paid a few hundred dollars to set up a family trust online, believing he was sparing his family the ordeal of probate. He signed the final pages, had them notarized at a local shipping store, and placed the binder in a desk drawer. What he did not do—because the automated software did not force him to—was actually transfer the title of their real estate into the name of the trust. Instead of bypassing the courts, his widow now faces a nine-month delay in Surrogate’s Court, paying legal fees to clean up a perfectly formatted, completely empty legal vessel.
The Difference Between a Document and a Trust
When people attempt to handle estate planning through a web portal, they usually conflate a legal document with a functional legal entity. When you pay an internet service, you are purchasing a templated PDF. But a family trust is not merely a piece of paper. It is a fiduciary relationship—a living vehicle designed to act as a custodian for your life’s work.
A proper trust requires intentional stewardship. It dictates how your assets will be managed if you become incapacitated and how they will transfer to the next generation when you are gone. A software program cannot evaluate your family dynamics, assess the maturity of your children, or foresee the tax implications of your specific real estate holdings. It simply maps the data you input into predefined fields. If you input the wrong data—or misunderstand the legal implications of a question—the software will happily generate a flawed document.
The Funding Failure Trap
The single most common failure of automated estate planning is funding. A trust only controls the assets that are legally titled in its name. Too many individuals create a revocable living trust online, print it out, and assume the job is done.
If you fail to execute a new deed transferring your property into the trust, or fail to re-register your brokerage accounts, or neglect to update the beneficiary designations on your life insurance policies, the trust holds nothing. When you die, those unfunded assets remain in your individual name. They will trigger the exact legal ordeal the trust was intended to avoid. Probate.
We frequently see families who thought they were protected, only to discover they must petition Surrogate’s Court to administer an estate while a useless trust document sits in a safe deposit box.
Strict Compliance with Statutory Law
Estate law is intensely local. The state does not grade on a curve for those who use out-of-state software, nor does Surrogate’s Court forgive procedural errors simply because a website gave you bad instructions.
Under New York’s Estates, Powers and Trusts Law (EPTL) § 7-1.17, a lifetime trust must be executed by the creator and at least one trustee. It must either be acknowledged in the manner required for the recording of a conveyance of real property, or executed in the presence of two witnesses who affix their signatures.
Online platforms frequently botch these execution formalities. They provide generic signature pages that may satisfy the laws of California or Nevada but fail to meet New York’s strict statutory standards. If a trust is improperly executed, it is invalid. A judge will not honor your intent if the statutory requirements are ignored. Your assets will pass via intestacy, distributed according to state law rather than your own deliberate design.
Ignoring the Elective Share
Another glaring blind spot in automated planning is the failure to account for spousal rights. Our state fiercely protects surviving spouses from being disinherited. Under EPTL § 5-1.1-A, a surviving spouse has a right of election to take a share of the deceased spouse’s estate, which generally amounts to the greater of $50,000 or one-third of the net estate.
This includes assets held in a revocable trust. If someone goes online, creates a trust, and attempts to leave all their assets to their children from a prior marriage—bypassing their current spouse—that trust will face immediate litigation upon their death. Software rarely counsels a user on the nuances of the elective share or the necessity of a postnuptial agreement to waive those rights. The result is generational conflict and depleted assets.
The Weight of Fiduciary Duty
When a web form asks you to name a trustee, it treats the decision like filling in an emergency contact. It does not pause to ask if the person you typed into the box possesses the financial literacy, temperament, or time to manage generational wealth.
Serving as a trustee carries a heavy fiduciary duty. A trustee must invest prudently, maintain meticulous accounting, and make difficult discretionary distributions. We spend hours with our clients exploring these appointments, asking the difficult questions: What if your chosen trustee moves out of the country? What if a beneficiary develops a severe substance issue or faces a devastating divorce?
These are contingencies that require human foresight. A trust should contain mechanisms to remove a rogue trustee or protect a vulnerable beneficiary from their own creditors. You do not get that level of protective architecture from a drop-down menu.
A family trust should be a deliberate act of legacy preservation, constructed to withstand the scrutiny of the courts and the test of time. It is not an administrative chore to be rushed through on a Sunday afternoon. If you have previously generated trust documents using an automated service and want to know if they are legally sound, bring your binder to our office for a formal document review. We will examine your paperwork, verify your asset titling, and determine if your current arrangement actually protects the people you care about most.




