Most people know they “should have a will.” Far fewer know what actually goes into drafting one that a New York court will honor. This page is built as a working checklist — a plain-language map of the decisions you make, the legal formalities your will must satisfy, and the concrete next steps to take once you are ready to act. Whether you live in Manhattan, on Long Island, in Westchester, the Hudson Valley, or Upstate, the rules below apply statewide, and the practical sequence is the same.
At Morgan Legal Group, attorney Russel Morgan, Esq. and our team draft and supervise the execution of wills for New Yorkers across the state. Use this overview to understand the path, then book a consultation when you are ready to begin.
What a Will Does — and What It Does Not
A will is a written instrument that directs how your property is distributed after you die. Under New York law it has a few defining features worth understanding before you start drafting:
- It takes effect only at death. A will controls nothing while you are alive. You can revise or revoke it at any time before then.
- It must be admitted to probate. After death, your will is filed with the Surrogate’s Court, which formally validates it and authorizes your executor to act. Learn more on our will execution page.
- It is not a “living will.” A living will is a separate health-care document expressing your end-of-life medical wishes — it has nothing to do with distributing property. Do not confuse the two. See our living will overview to understand the difference.
- If you have no will, the State writes one for you. Dying without a valid will (intestate) means your property passes under EPTL Article 4 to your statutory next of kin in a fixed order — which may not match what you would have chosen. Our intestacy / no will page explains how that distribution works.
The takeaway: drafting a will is how you keep control instead of handing the outcome to a statute.
The New York Execution Requirements (EPTL §3-2.1)
The formalities for a valid New York will are set out in Estates, Powers and Trusts Law (EPTL) §3-2.1. These are not optional niceties — a will that misses them can be denied probate. Here is the checklist of what the statute requires:
| Requirement | What EPTL §3-2.1 Demands |
|---|---|
| Signature placement | The testator must sign at the end of the will. (Another person may sign for the testator, but only in the testator’s presence and at their direction.) |
| Witnesses | At least two attesting witnesses are required. |
| Witness timing | Both witnesses must sign within one 30-day period. The law presumes (rebuttably) that this 30-day requirement is met. |
| Publication | The testator must declare to the witnesses that the instrument is their will. |
| Presence / acknowledgment | The testator signs in the witnesses’ presence or acknowledges the signature to each witness. |
| Witness signatures | The witnesses sign at the testator’s request and add their residence addresses. |
For a deeper walkthrough of each element, see our NY will requirements page. Getting these mechanics right is the single most common reason a homemade will succeeds or fails — which is why attorney supervision at the signing matters.
Drafting Your Will: The Practical Checklist
Beyond the legal formalities, the actual drafting work is a series of decisions. Walk through them in order:
1. Inventory what you own
List your assets — real estate, bank and investment accounts, retirement accounts, life insurance, business interests, and personal property with meaningful value or sentiment. Note which assets already pass by beneficiary designation (those generally fall outside the will).
2. Decide who receives what
Identify your beneficiaries and how you want property divided. Be specific: name people clearly, describe gifts precisely, and consider what happens if a beneficiary predeceases you.
3. Choose your fiduciaries
- Executor — the person (or institution) who administers your estate and carries out the will.
- Guardian — if you have minor children, name who would raise them.
- Trustee — if your plan creates any trusts (for minors, for a beneficiary with special needs, or for staggered distributions), name who manages them.
Always name a backup for each role.
4. Account for your spouse’s rights
New York gives a surviving spouse a right of election under EPTL 5-1.1-A — a minimum share of the estate the spouse can claim regardless of what your will says. A will that ignores this can be partially overridden. Plan around it deliberately rather than discovering it later.
5. Draft the instrument
This is where precise legal language matters. Ambiguous wording invites disputes and probate delays. A properly drafted will uses clear dispositive provisions, names alternates, and includes the attestation language that supports the §3-2.1 formalities.
6. Execute it correctly
Drafting is only half the job. The will must be signed and witnessed exactly as EPTL §3-2.1 requires (see the table above). A supervised execution ceremony — ideally with a self-proving affidavit — protects the will against later challenges.
7. Store it safely and revisit it
Keep the original where your executor can find it, and tell that person where it is. Then review the will after major life events: marriage, divorce, a new child or grandchild, a significant change in assets, or a move. Updates are made by a new will or by a codicil; see our codicils & amendments page.
When You Should Move Sooner Rather Than Later
Some life situations make drafting (or updating) a will more urgent:
- You recently married, divorced, or remarried.
- You have minor children and no named guardian.
- You acquired real estate or a business interest.
- You moved to or from New York and have never confirmed your documents are valid here.
- Your current will is handwritten, downloaded, or unsupervised at signing.
- You have a blended family or want to provide for someone in a non-standard way.
If any of these describe you, treat the checklist above as a to-do list, not a someday list.
Your Next Steps
- Gather your asset list and the names of your intended beneficiaries and fiduciaries.
- Note any complicating factors — a spouse, minor children, a business, out-of-state property, or prior wills.
- Schedule a consultation so your will is drafted to your wishes and executed to satisfy EPTL §3-2.1 the first time.
When you are ready, attorney Russel Morgan, Esq. and the team at Morgan Legal Group serve clients across New York State.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many witnesses does a New York will need?
At least two attesting witnesses are required under EPTL §3-2.1. Both must sign within one 30-day period, and they add their residence addresses next to their signatures. The law presumes the 30-day requirement is met, but a clean, supervised signing avoids any question.
Where must I sign my New York will?
The testator must sign at the end of the will. If you are physically unable to sign, another person may sign for you — but only in your presence and at your direction. You must also declare to the witnesses that the document is your will (this is called publication).
What happens if I die in New York without a will?
You are considered “intestate,” and EPTL Article 4 controls who inherits — distributing your property to your next of kin in a fixed statutory order. That order may not reflect your wishes, which is the core reason to draft a will. See our intestacy / no will page.
Is a “living will” the same as a regular will?
No. A living will is a separate health-care document that states your end-of-life medical wishes. A property will distributes your assets after death and must be admitted to probate in Surrogate’s Court. They are different documents serving different purposes.
Can my spouse override my will?
A surviving spouse has a right of election under EPTL 5-1.1-A, allowing a claim to a minimum share of the estate regardless of the will’s terms. Your plan should account for this share deliberately so the document holds up as intended.
This page is general information about New York law, not legal advice for your situation. For guidance on your own will, consult a licensed New York attorney.
Further reading from Morgan Legal Group: key things to know about writing a will.