Connecticut Estate Planning
If you own anything in Connecticut — a home, a retirement account, a child — you have an estate, and Connecticut law will decide what happens to it if you don't plan first. This 2026 guide walks through the five documents every Connecticut adult should have and shows how VoiceWill™ produces them from one voice conversation.
Five documents every Connecticut adult should have
A complete Connecticut estate plan is rarely one document — it is a coordinated set. Together they handle inheritance, incapacity, healthcare, and minor children.
- Last will and testament — names heirs, executor, and guardians for minor children
- Revocable living trust — avoids Connecticut probate for assets you fund into it
- Durable financial power of attorney — names who pays bills if you cannot
- Advance healthcare directive — names a medical proxy and end-of-life wishes
- Updated beneficiary designations on retirement, life insurance, and TOD accounts
Connecticut signing and witness rules at a glance
Connecticut requires two adult witnesses for a will and, for most Connecticut POAs and healthcare directives, additional notarization. Connecticut does not accept holographic (handwritten) wills.
Two witnesses required. Notarization is optional but recommended for a self-proving affidavit.
Connecticut probate and how to avoid it
Connecticut probate is the court-supervised process of validating a will, paying debts, and distributing assets. It is public record, can take many months, and costs filing fees plus (in larger estates) executor and attorney fees. Families avoid probate by funding a revocable living trust, naming TOD/POD beneficiaries on accounts, and titling real estate appropriately.
Estate taxes for Connecticut residents
The federal estate-tax exemption is set very high in 2026 and most Connecticut families never pay federal estate tax. A handful of states levy their own estate or inheritance taxes — check whether Connecticut currently does and at what threshold, especially if you own real estate in more than one state. VoiceWill™ flags whether your estate may need professional review.
Building your Connecticut estate plan with VoiceWill™
VoiceWill™ replaces a four-hour intake form with a friendly voice conversation. You answer questions out loud; Vera assembles a Connecticut-compliant will, trust, POA, and directive, plus signing instructions specific to Connecticut law. The whole conversation usually takes under an hour, and you can re-run it any time life changes.
Frequently asked questions about Connecticut estate planning
What documents do I need for Connecticut estate planning?
Most Connecticut adults need a will, a revocable living trust, a durable power of attorney, and an advance healthcare directive — plus current beneficiary designations on retirement and life insurance accounts.
How long does Connecticut probate take?
Simple Connecticut probates can close in 4–6 months; contested or complex estates often take 12–18 months or longer. Funding a living trust keeps qualifying assets out of probate entirely.
Does Connecticut have an estate or inheritance tax?
Connecticut tax rules change. Confirm the current Connecticut estate or inheritance tax with a local attorney or CPA before relying on online summaries — federal exemption levels are not the same as state law.
Can I do Connecticut estate planning online?
Yes. VoiceWill™ drafts Connecticut-compliant documents from a guided voice conversation. Complex estates (blended families, special-needs heirs, multi-state real estate) should still review with a licensed Connecticut attorney.
What happens if I die without a will in Connecticut?
You die "intestate." Connecticut intestacy statutes pick your heirs in a fixed order — usually spouse and children first, then parents, siblings, and more distant relatives — regardless of what you would have wanted.
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