If you have never made an estate plan before, take a breath — you are in the right place. This is the essentials guide: no jargon you cannot follow, no assumption that you already know the difference between a will and a trust. Whether you live in Manhattan or Buffalo, on Long Island or in the Hudson Valley, the same core New York laws apply to you. The goal here is simple: explain the four documents that protect almost everyone, show you how they fit together, and reassure you that getting started is far easier than putting it off feels.
Estate planning is not just for the wealthy or the elderly. It is for any adult who wants to decide — rather than leave to a court — who receives their property, who makes decisions if they cannot, and who cares for the people they love. At Morgan Legal Group, attorney Russel Morgan, Esq. helps New Yorkers across the entire state build plans that start with the basics and grow with their lives.
The Four Essentials Every New York Plan Should Have
A comprehensive New York estate plan is not one document — it is a coordinated set of four, each doing a different job. Think of them as a team. Missing one leaves a gap that the others cannot cover.
| Document | What it does | Governing NY law |
|---|---|---|
| Last Will and Testament | Directs who inherits your property and names guardians for minor children | EPTL §3-2.1 |
| Trust | Holds assets to avoid probate, protect property, or plan for taxes/Medicaid | EPTL Article 7 |
| Durable Power of Attorney | Lets a trusted agent handle your finances if you cannot | GOL §5-1513 |
| Health Care Proxy | Lets an agent make your medical decisions if you cannot speak for yourself | NY Public Health Law Article 29-C |
The reassuring part: you do not have to tackle all four in one overwhelming sitting. But you do want them coordinated so they speak with one voice. Let us walk through each.
Your Will: The Foundation
A will is where most first-timers begin, and for good reason. It is the document that says, in your own words, who gets what — and, if you have young children, who will raise them.
New York is specific about how a will must be signed. Under EPTL §3-2.1, a valid will requires:
- Two attesting witnesses who watch you sign (or acknowledge your signature);
- Your signature at the end of the document — anything written below your signature can be disregarded;
- Publication, meaning you declare to the witnesses that the document is your will.
These formalities exist to protect you, but they also mean a do-it-yourself will is easy to get wrong. A will that misses a step can be challenged or thrown out — and then the law decides for you.
What happens if you have no will at all? New York’s intestacy rules under EPTL Article 4 take over. The state distributes your property according to a fixed formula based on who survives you — a spouse, children, parents, and so on. That formula may not match your wishes at all, and it gives you no say over guardianship of your children. Writing a will is how you keep that decision in your own hands.
Trusts: Helpful, Not Just for the Rich
Many first-timers assume trusts are only for millionaires. Not so. Under EPTL Article 7, a trust is simply a legal arrangement where someone holds property for someone else’s benefit — and different trusts solve very different problems.
- Revocable living trust. This avoids probate, the court process of validating a will. Assets held in the trust pass to your beneficiaries privately and without that court step. Important honesty check: a revocable trust does not save estate taxes — its benefit is privacy and a smoother transfer.
- Irrevocable trust. Because you give up control of the assets, an irrevocable trust can reduce estate taxes, protect assets from creditors, and support Medicaid planning. New York applies a 5-year look-back to Medicaid, so assets generally must be moved into the trust well before you need long-term care.
- Supplemental Needs Trust (SNT). Authorized by EPTL §7-1.12, an SNT lets you provide for a loved one with disabilities without disqualifying them from means-tested government benefits.
You may not need a trust on day one. But knowing they exist — and what each can do — helps you recognize when life (a home, a family member with special needs, long-term-care worries) makes one worth a conversation.
Power of Attorney: Protecting Your Finances While You Are Alive
Your will only takes effect after death. But what if you are alive and simply unable to manage your own affairs — after an accident, an illness, or with age? That is the job of the Power of Attorney.
Under GOL §5-1513, a New York power of attorney is durable by default, meaning it stays in effect even if you later lose mental capacity (which is exactly when you need it most). New York modernized this document with a 2021 statutory short form that is cleaner and easier for banks and institutions to accept.
Your power of attorney lets a trusted agent pay your bills, manage accounts, and handle property on your behalf. Without one, your family may have to ask a court to appoint a guardian — a slower, costlier, more public process. A simple POA, signed in advance, usually avoids all of that.
Health Care Proxy: Your Voice in a Medical Crisis
The power of attorney handles money. It does not cover medical decisions. For those, New York provides a separate document — the Health Care Proxy — under Public Health Law Article 29-C.
A health care proxy appoints an agent to make medical decisions for you if you are unable to make them yourself. This is the person who will speak with your doctors and honor your wishes about treatment. Keeping it separate from your financial POA is intentional: the right person to manage your bank account may not be the right person to sit at your hospital bedside, and New York lets you choose each independently.
The New York Estate Tax in 2026 — and the “Cliff” You Must Know
Here is a number that matters even for first-timers, because New York’s estate tax has a famous trap.
For deaths on or after January 1, 2026 through December 31, 2026, the New York basic exclusion amount is $7,350,000. Estates below that figure owe no New York estate tax.
But New York does not phase the exemption out gently. It uses a cliff: once an estate exceeds 105% of the exclusion — $7,717,500 — the exemption disappears entirely, and the estate is taxed from the very first dollar. The rate is progressive, from 3% to 16%.
A quick illustration of why the cliff stings:
| Taxable estate | What happens |
|---|---|
| $7,350,000 or less | No New York estate tax |
| Just over $7,350,000, up to $7,717,500 | Only the amount over the exclusion is taxed |
| Over $7,717,500 (the cliff) | The entire estate is taxed from dollar one |
Two more essentials to keep in mind:
- New York has no gift tax — you can give gifts during life without a separate New York gift tax.
- However, gifts made within 3 years of death are added back into your taxable estate. So last-minute giving to dodge the cliff generally does not work.
If your estate is anywhere near these thresholds, planning matters enormously — sometimes a modest charitable gift or trust strategy can keep you under the cliff and save a large tax bill. Our NY estate tax guide goes deeper.
How the Four Documents Work Together
The magic is in the coordination. Your will directs what happens after death. Your trust can keep assets out of probate and address taxes or Medicaid. Your power of attorney protects your finances while you are alive. Your health care proxy protects your medical voice. Drafted in isolation, these documents can contradict each other. Drafted together, they form a seamless safety net — which is exactly why working with one attorney across the whole plan pays off.
A Simple First-Timer Checklist
- List your major assets and who you want to receive them.
- Decide who you trust to manage finances (POA agent) and medical decisions (health care proxy agent).
- If you have minor children, choose a guardian.
- Note whether probate avoidance, Medicaid, or the estate-tax cliff applies to you.
- Sit down with an attorney to turn that list into properly signed New York documents.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I really need an estate plan if I do not own much?
Yes. Even with modest assets, a will keeps the intestacy formula in EPTL Article 4 from deciding for you, and a health care proxy and power of attorney protect you during life — regardless of net worth.
What is the difference between a power of attorney and a health care proxy?
A power of attorney (GOL §5-1513) covers financial decisions; a health care proxy (Public Health Law Article 29-C) covers medical decisions. They are separate documents, and you can name different people for each.
Will a living trust lower my estate taxes?
No. A revocable living trust under EPTL Article 7 avoids probate and adds privacy, but it does not reduce estate taxes. Tax reduction typically requires an irrevocable trust or other planning.
What is the New York estate tax cliff in 2026?
For 2026, the exclusion is $7,350,000. If your estate exceeds 105% of that — $7,717,500 — you lose the entire exemption and are taxed from the first dollar, at rates from 3% to 16%.
Can I just write my own will at home?
You can, but EPTL §3-2.1 requires two witnesses, your signature at the end, and publication. Small mistakes can invalidate a homemade will, so professional drafting is the safer path.
Start With Confidence, Statewide
You do not have to understand every nuance to begin — you just have to begin. Morgan Legal Group, led by attorney Russel Morgan, Esq., guides New Yorkers across the entire state, from New York City and Long Island to Westchester, the Hudson Valley, and Upstate, through these essentials at a comfortable pace.
Schedule your consultation with Russel Morgan, Esq. →
Explore the basics further: Estate Planning Overview · Wills · Trusts · Power of Attorney · Health Care Proxy · NY Estate Tax Guide · NY Statewide Guide
External references: NY Senate / EPTL · NYS Department of Taxation and Finance · NYS Department of Health
Further reading from Morgan Legal Group: how trusts fit an estate plan.