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Create a Living Trust Online — Guided by Voice

A revocable living trust can help your family avoid probate, keep your wishes private, and make settling your estate calmer. VoiceWill guides you through the questions an attorney would ask — by voice — and prepares an attorney-ready trust document you can review with your own counsel.

The problem most families face

Probate can be slow, public, and expensive. A funded living trust often skips probate entirely, but the paperwork to set one up — naming trustees, listing beneficiaries, deciding what happens if a beneficiary is a minor — can feel overwhelming on a blank form.

How VoiceWill helps

Vera, our voice guide, walks you through every decision in plain language. You answer out loud (or type), and VoiceWill assembles a clean, attorney-ready trust document along with the rest of your estate package. You can pause and resume any time.

What's included

  • Revocable living trust agreement
  • Pour-over will to catch untitled assets
  • Schedule of assets worksheet
  • Successor trustee instructions
  • Optional legacy letter for family
  • Secure storage in your document package

Who it's for

Homeowners, parents of minor children, families with property in more than one state, or anyone who wants to keep their estate out of public probate court.

When to use an attorney instead

We recommend attorney review for blended families, taxable estates, special needs beneficiaries, business ownership, or real estate in multiple states. VoiceWill is document preparation — not legal advice — and complex situations deserve a licensed estate attorney's eyes.

Helpful next steps

Frequently asked questions

What is a revocable living trust?

A revocable living trust is a legal arrangement that holds your assets during your lifetime and distributes them after death, typically without going through probate. You can change or revoke it at any time while you have capacity.

Do I still need a will if I have a trust?

Yes. Most estate planners recommend a 'pour-over will' that catches anything you didn't transfer into your trust. VoiceWill prepares both documents together so they stay consistent.

Will my living trust be valid in my state?

Trusts must follow your state's signing and witnessing rules. VoiceWill prepares attorney-ready documents and points you to the requirements for your state — review and, for complex estates, attorney sign-off is recommended.

Can I fund the trust myself?

You can re-title many assets (bank accounts, real estate deeds, brokerage accounts) into the trust yourself, but real estate transfers and business interests often benefit from attorney help.

Ready to organize your estate documents in one guided conversation?

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Helpful resources

⚖️ Legal Notice: VoiceWill™ is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice. Documents may require attorney review, witnesses, notarization, or state-specific execution steps before they are legally valid.