- If you want to create trusts or restrictions in your estate, it is a virtual certainty that you are better off hiring an estate planning attorney.
- If your net worth is over $1M, it is a virtual certainty that you are better off hiring an estate planning attorney.
- If your estate has non-typical sources of income and assets, it is a virtual certainty that you are better off hiring an estate planning attorney.
Legal Zoom for Wills: an Attorney’s Honest Review
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Legal Zoom is a popular online platform that provides legal services, including the creation of wills. One
of the most common questions that I get has to do with the comparison of a Legal Zoom will to an
attorney-prepared will. While Legal Zoom can be a convenient and affordable option for some people, it
is definitely not for everyone.
There are some attorneys out there who will tell you to NEVER use Legal Zoom for anything. They will
tell you how terrible their documents are and have all kinds of horror stories for you.
I am not one of those attorneys.
Using Legal Zoom for creating a will is a great option for the right people under the right circumstances. For a certain set of customers, Legal Zoom has really done a great thing making legal services more accessible. But, for the wrong people or the wrong circumstances, a Legal Zoom will can be invalid, unwieldy, inappropriate, or
even downright counterproductive.
So let’s talk about those circumstances and some of the upsides and downsides to a Legal Zoom will.
When you start the process of creating your Legal Zoom will, the online platform will run you through a
series of questions – some of which may have some complicated legal ideas attached. If you have
further questions about what exactly you are being asked to decide, there is no lawyer in front of you to
help you understand (and if you call LegalZoom, their CSRs (who are not lawyers) cannot give you legal
advice or explain legal concepts).
If you answer these questions correctly, you are likely to end up with a quality document that will do
what you need it to do. CONGRATULATIONS!
If you answer these questions incorrectly, you are likely to end up with a document that would be great
for someone else, but is not great for you. Best case scenario, such an inappropriate document could
create some minor inconveniences; worst case, you could be handing your heirs an incipient controversy
with legal fees twenty times what a will would have cost.
The upshot is that, if you are comfortable doing a significant amount of research and educating yourself
on what various legal terms mean, then a Legal Zoom will might be a good option for you. If you are not, you might rethink where you’re getting your will done.
One of the most common issues with using LegalZoom for a will is that it may not be tailored to your
specific needs and circumstances.
Legal Zoom’s standard will template is written for a certain range of circumstances, and can be modified
by the program to accommodate a few different scenarios within that range of circumstances. But what
if your circumstances are outside of what the programmers envisioned?
The Legal Zoom will template may not take into account unique family situations, atypical financial
arrangements, or unusual assets you may own. This can lead to unintended consequences, or just a flat-
out inability to accomplish what you set out to accomplish.
Here, you might ask, with some justification “don’t lawyers use templates too?” – and the answer is YES,
WE DO. But here is the difference. When there is a mismatch between the template and the situation
such as client goals, etc., a competent estate planning lawyer knows what parts of the template can be
changed, and what parts need to remain immovable. A lawyer can generally help you find a way to get
anywhere you want to go (as long as it is legal!), even if where you want to go is off-road from the
template.
With Legal Zoom, the template can only change so much. While this limitation is absolutely
understandable from a perspective of Legal Zoom limiting their own liability, it is nonetheless a major
limitation.
If you call Legal Zoom for help with your legal documents, you will not be talking to a lawyer, and the
CSRs won’t give you legal advice.
Let me say that again. If you call Legal Zoom, the Customer Service Representatives assisting you are not lawyers cannot and will not give you legal advice. Which means that if you are struggling to understand what some of those multiple choice questions mean… tough luck, you’re on your own!
If you choose to work with a qualified estate planning law firm, on the other hand, you have a direct line
to a real lawyer.
Legal Zoom is not geared to handle estates that are ultra-complicated or estates that may end up owing
estate tax.
These types of estates generally need customized documents in order to be the most tax-efficient.
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