Washington Estate Planning
Estate planning in Washington is the legal scaffolding that protects your family if you become incapacitated or die. A complete Washington estate plan typically includes a will, a revocable living trust, a durable power of attorney, an advance healthcare directive, and an updated beneficiary list. This guide explains each piece — and how VoiceWill™ helps Washington families finish all of it by voice in about an hour.
Five documents every Washington adult should have
A complete Washington 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 Washington 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
Washington signing and witness rules at a glance
Washington requires two adult witnesses for a will and, for most Washington POAs and healthcare directives, additional notarization. Washington does not accept holographic (handwritten) wills.
Two witnesses required. Notarization is optional but recommended for a self-proving affidavit.
Washington probate and how to avoid it
Washington 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 Washington residents
The federal estate-tax exemption is set very high in 2026 and most Washington families never pay federal estate tax. A handful of states levy their own estate or inheritance taxes — check whether Washington 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 Washington estate plan with VoiceWill™
VoiceWill™ replaces a four-hour intake form with a friendly voice conversation. You answer questions out loud; Vera assembles a Washington-compliant will, trust, POA, and directive, plus signing instructions specific to Washington law. The whole conversation usually takes under an hour, and you can re-run it any time life changes.
Frequently asked questions about Washington estate planning
What documents do I need for Washington estate planning?
Most Washington 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 Washington probate take?
Simple Washington 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 Washington have an estate or inheritance tax?
Washington tax rules change. Confirm the current Washington 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 Washington estate planning online?
Yes. VoiceWill™ drafts Washington-compliant documents from a guided voice conversation. Complex estates (blended families, special-needs heirs, multi-state real estate) should still review with a licensed Washington attorney.
What happens if I die without a will in Washington?
You die "intestate." Washington 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.
Start your Washington estate plan by voice in under an hour.
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