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Wills, Trusts & Estate BasicsA document with a folded corner, text lines, and a round seal.

The paperwork that protects everything else you've built.

What wills and trusts each do, beneficiary designations, and when you need an attorney.

~21 minutes of free reading below

What you'll learn

  • What a will does, what a trust does, and why California families often use both
  • How probate works in California — and why so many people plan around it
  • Why beneficiary forms quietly override wills (and the 15-minute audit that fixes it)
  • The incapacity documents everyone needs: power of attorney and advance directive
  • Where you stand: only 24% of 2025 survey respondents had a will, and just 13% a living trust (Caring.com)
Estate readiness wheelThe eight pillars of estate readiness arranged as a wheel: Will, Trust Review, Power of Attorney, Advance Directive, Beneficiaries, Asset Titling, Guardianship, Digital Assets.WillTrust ReviewPower ofAttorneyAdvanceDirectiveBeneficiariesAsset TitlingGuardianshipDigital Assets

Key concepts, in plain English

The will
A legal document naming who receives your property and who raises your minor children. Essential — and in California, a will alone generally still passes through probate. An estate-planning attorney drafts it; our role is helping you understand what to ask for.
The revocable living trust
A legal entity that holds assets during your life and passes them outside probate at death. Common in California precisely because probate here is slow and fee-heavy. Drafted by a licensed estate-planning attorney — never from a template you don't understand.
Probate in California
The court-supervised process of validating a will and distributing an estate. It's public, often takes many months, and fees scale with the size of the estate — three reasons trusts are so common in this state.
Beneficiary designations
The named recipients on 401(k)s, IRAs, and life insurance generally override whatever your will says. An ex-spouse on a forgotten form is the classic painful surprise. Reviewing every designation is a 15-minute audit anyone can do this week.
Power of attorney & advance directive
The 'while you're alive' documents: a power of attorney authorizes someone to handle finances if you can't, and an advance health-care directive records your medical wishes and names who speaks for you. Incapacity planning matters at every age, not just late in life.
Guardianship
Naming — usually in a will — who would raise your minor children. Without it, a court decides using its own criteria. For parents, this single decision is reason enough to start.

Myth vs. fact

Myth

Estate planning is for the wealthy.

Fact

If you have a child, a home, a 401(k), or anyone who depends on you, you have an estate. In a 2025 survey only 24% of respondents had a will — most people aren't behind because they're poor; they're behind because nobody explained it.

Myth

A will avoids probate.

Fact

In California it generally doesn't — a will is instructions for probate, not a detour around it. Assets held in a properly funded trust, plus accounts with named beneficiaries, are what typically pass outside the process.

Myth

My will controls everything I own.

Fact

Beneficiary designations and how assets are titled often override the will. The three layers — will, titling, designations — have to agree, or the paperwork wins over your intentions.

Myth

I did my documents years ago, so I'm set.

Fact

Marriages, divorces, births, moves, and new accounts all change the picture. A plan that doesn't reflect your current life can misfire exactly when your family needs it to work.

Try it on your own numbers

Concepts stick when they become your numbers. The formula is shown right on the page — no sign-up, nothing saved.

Check your estate readiness

Go deeper

Not sure if you need an attorney yet? Ask — if you do, we'll say so.

Conversations are educational discussions with a licensed insurance professional — not financial, legal, tax, or investment advice.