A young tech executive in Manhattan thinks she has her affairs in order. She used a popular online service to generate her will, printed it, and signed it in her apartment with two friends from her building as witnesses. It felt efficient—a task checked off a list. Years later, when that will is presented to the Surrogate’s Court, a problem emerges. One of her friends who witnessed the will was also named as a beneficiary to receive a small but meaningful gift. The court, following New York law, has to make a difficult choice—potentially voiding that friend’s inheritance to validate the will for everyone else.
This is not a rare occurrence. In my practice, I’ve seen the aftermath of well-intentioned DIY estate planning. The appeal of online will-makers is obvious. They promise a fast, inexpensive alternative to hiring a lawyer. For some people, in the simplest of circumstances, a basic statutory will might be better than no will at all. But for most families, especially here in New York, these one-size-fits-all documents often create more problems than they solve. They are a snapshot, a static form, in a life that is anything but static.
The Peril of a Flawless-Looking Document
The most dangerous thing about a computer-generated will is that it looks official. It has the right fonts, legal-sounding phrases, and places for signatures. But a will is more than a piece of paper; it’s the end result of a process. In law, process is everything. The most critical part of creating a valid will is the execution—the formal signing and witnessing ceremony.
New York’s Estates, Powers and Trusts Law (EPTL) § 3-2.1 lays out the requirements with precision. The person making the will—the testator—must sign it at the end. They must declare to the witnesses that the document they are signing is their will. At least two witnesses must be present, and they must sign their names within 30 days of each other. The testator’s signature must be seen by the witnesses, and the witnesses must sign in the testator’s presence. This isn’t just procedure; it’s a safeguard against fraud and undue influence.
An online service cannot supervise this ceremony. It cannot ensure your witnesses are disinterested parties. It cannot confirm you followed the script perfectly. A single misstep can give a disgruntled heir grounds to challenge the will, forcing your estate into costly and painful litigation in Surrogate’s Court.
A Form Cannot Ask the Right Questions
Beyond the legal formalities, a software program is incapable of providing counsel. It is an order-taker, not a strategist. It cannot ask the follow-up questions that uncover the real-life complexities of your family and finances.
I recently met with a couple who had a DIY will that left everything “equally to our children.” It sounded fair. But one of their three children has special needs and receives government benefits. A direct, outright inheritance would have disqualified him from those essential programs. Their simple, “equal” distribution would have unintentionally caused him immense harm. We restructured their plan using a supplemental needs trust to hold his share, protecting both his inheritance and his benefits. A web form would never have identified that issue.
This is the core of the work. It’s about anticipating contingencies:
- What happens if the person you name as your child’s guardian passes away before you do?
- How can you protect a child’s inheritance from a future divorce or creditors?
- Have you considered how your retirement accounts, with their own beneficiary designations, fit into your overall plan?
- Who will make financial and healthcare decisions for you if you become incapacitated? A simple will does nothing to address this.
These are the conversations that build a resilient plan. It’s about stewardship—the thoughtful, deliberate management of what you’ve built. That requires a human conversation, not a decision tree in an app.
From Document to Legacy
When you work with an attorney, you are not just buying a document. You are engaging a counselor who has a fiduciary duty to act in your best interest. We are responsible for not only drafting a valid will but also for helping you understand the responsibilities of the people you appoint—your executor, your trustee, your agent under a power of attorney.
We explain what it means to be a fiduciary, to manage assets prudently, and to communicate with beneficiaries. This guidance helps you select the right people for these crucial roles and gives them a foundation for success. When the time comes, your family has an advocate they can turn to, someone who understands the plan’s intent and can help guide the executor through the administration process.
The convenience of a DIY will is tempting. I understand the impulse to get it done quickly. But your family’s security is not the place for a shortcut that may lead them to a legal dead end. An estate plan is not a product you buy off a shelf; it is the final act of stewardship for the people you love.
If you have already created a will using an online platform, the most prudent step you can take is to have it reviewed. My firm can analyze your existing documents to identify any vulnerabilities under New York law and confirm whether your plan will function as you intend.




