Estate Planning • Explained in Plain Language

Welcome to
Your Legacy.

Most families put off estate planning because nobody ever explained it simply. This page fixes that — what an estate plan actually is, why a trust matters, and honest answers to every "but what about…"

10-minute read No legal jargon No pressure
A family at home — the reason estate plans exist
The short version
An estate plan is instructions for the people you love.

Watch First

Estate Planning in One Conversation

A walkthrough of digital estate planning and what it protects — featuring Mo from The Alliance.

Video coming soon
The Alliance · featuring Mo

The Foundation

What an Estate Plan Actually Is

Strip away the jargon and an estate plan is four documents working together. Each one answers a question your family will otherwise have to answer in court.

01

The Living Trust

A private container that holds your home, accounts, and property while you're alive — and hands them directly to the people you choose when you're gone. Assets inside a trust skip probate court entirely. You stay in full control as trustee; nothing changes in daily life.

02

The Will (Pour-Over)

The backstop. It names guardians for minor children and "pours" anything accidentally left outside the trust back into it. A will alone does not avoid probate — it's the instruction manual the court reads, not a shortcut around the court.

03

Financial Power of Attorney

Names who can pay your bills, manage accounts, and sign for you if you're incapacitated — a stroke, an accident, dementia. Without it, your spouse or kids may need a court-supervised conservatorship just to access your own accounts on your behalf.

04

Healthcare Directive

Your medical voice when you can't speak: who decides, and what you'd want. It spares your family the worst version of a hospital hallway argument — guessing, and disagreeing, about what you would have wanted.

Why Set Up a Trust

"Probate isn't a maybe. If you own a home in California and rely on a will alone, your family is very likely headed to court."

The math: California probate fees are set by statute — roughly 4% of the first $100K, 3% of the next $100K, 2% of the next $800K — calculated on gross value, ignoring your mortgage. A $900,000 home can generate $40,000+ in combined attorney and executor fees, before court costs.

The wait: California probate commonly runs 12–18 months, sometimes longer. Your family can't cleanly sell, refinance, or distribute while the estate is frozen.

The exposure: probate is a public record. Anyone can look up what you owned, what you owed, and who inherited. A trust keeps all of it private.

The living benefit: a trust also covers incapacity — your successor trustee steps in seamlessly if you can't manage things, with no conservatorship hearing.

A couple reviewing their trust together

A trust earns its keep when you…

  • Own a home or any California real estate (the #1 probate trigger)
  • Have children — especially minors, or kids from a prior marriage
  • Want a specific person handling things, not a court-appointed one
  • Care who knows your business — trusts stay private, probate doesn't
  • Want incapacity covered, not just death

Honest Answers

"But What About…"

Every hesitation below is reasonable. Here's the straight answer to each one.

"I'm not wealthy enough to need an estate plan."
Estate planning isn't about being rich — it's about owning anything your family would have to untangle. A house, a 401(k), a bank account, kids. In California, estates over $184,500 in probate-countable assets go through full probate — a modest home clears that bar on its own. The less your family has, the less they can afford to lose 4% of it to fees and a year to the court calendar.
"I already have a will — isn't that enough?"
A will is essential (it names guardians) but it does not avoid probate — it's the document the probate court administers. Think of it this way: a will tells the judge what you wanted; a trust removes the judge from the process. Most complete plans use both: a trust to hold assets, a pour-over will as the safety net.
"It's too expensive."
A complete trust-based plan typically costs a fraction of what a single probate proceeding costs — often less than one-tenth of the fees on a typical California home, paid once instead of extracted from your family at the worst possible time. And unlike probate fees, it's a known number you control today.
"I'll get to it later — I'm healthy."
Every plan is signed by someone who felt fine that day. The documents only work if they exist before the event — and incapacity, not death, is the more common early trigger. There is also a practical window: you must be legally competent to sign. Families who wait for a diagnosis sometimes discover they've waited past the point the law allows.
"My family gets along — they'll figure it out."
They probably will get along… right up until a house needs selling, one sibling lives in it, and the court asks who has authority. Probate doesn't ask families to cooperate — it forces them to litigate their cooperation in filings. The kindest thing you can leave a close family is instructions clear enough that they never have to test how close they are.
"Isn't probate not that bad?"
In a few states it's tolerable. California is not one of them: statutory percentage fees on gross value, 12–18 month timelines, public records, and mandatory court supervision. California is consistently ranked among the most expensive, slowest probate jurisdictions in the country — which is exactly why living trusts are so standard here.
"Won't a trust be a hassle to maintain?"
After the initial funding (retitling your home and accounts into the trust — we help with this), a trust mostly just sits there. You file the same tax return, use the same accounts, sell or refinance the same way. The main upkeep is a review after big life events: marriage, divorce, a birth, a home purchase. We check in annually so it never drifts out of date.
"Where does life insurance fit into this?"
Life insurance is the funding engine of an estate plan — it creates the cash that pays off the mortgage, equalizes inheritances, covers final costs, and replaces income, arriving tax-free and outside probate. A trust decides who's in charge and who gets what; insurance makes sure there's something meaningful to get. We design both sides together.

How It Works

From "We Should" to Done

01

Legacy Conversation

A free call about your family, your home, and what you want to happen. We map what you own, what's exposed to probate, and what a right-sized plan looks like — in plain language.

02

Design & Documents

Your trust, will, powers of attorney, and healthcare directive are prepared and reviewed with you page by page. We coordinate with attorneys and your CPA so the legal, tax, and insurance layers agree.

03

Fund, Protect & Review

We help retitle your home and accounts into the trust (the step DIY kits skip), layer in the right insurance, and review it all annually so your plan grows with your life.

Your Family Deserves
a Plan.

Free consultation. No pressure, no jargon — just a clear picture of what protecting your legacy takes.

Or email: info@mylegacymanagement.com