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Estate planning is often pitched as a “family” project — spouses, children, joint accounts, college funds. But a great many New Yorkers are planning for one life: their own. Whether you are single by choice, widowed, divorced, child-free, or simply the only person who knows where everything is, your will should reflect your priorities, not a template designed for a household of four.

That is the entire purpose of this page. At Morgan Legal Group, attorney Russel Morgan, Esq. drafts wills for individuals across New York State — New York City, Long Island, Westchester, the Hudson Valley, and Upstate. The individual planner faces a distinct reality: without a spouse or obvious heir, New York’s default rules can send your assets to relatives you barely know, or tie up the people you do care about in avoidable court process. A properly drafted, properly executed will fixes that.

Why an Individual Specifically Needs a Will

When you have no will, New York does not improvise in your favor. EPTL Article 4 governs intestacy — distribution to your “next of kin” in a fixed statutory order. For a married parent, that order often roughly matches their wishes. For an individual, it frequently does not.

Consider what the law does when there is no spouse and no children: assets pass to parents, then to siblings, then to nieces and nephews, then to ever-more-distant relatives. The result for many single New Yorkers:

A will lets you override every one of those defaults. You — not Article 4 — decide who inherits, who serves as executor, and who, if anyone, is cut out.

How a New York Will Must Be Executed (EPTL §3-2.1)

A will only protects you if it is valid. New York’s execution formalities are strict, and EPTL §3-2.1 is unforgiving of shortcuts. For the individual signing without a spouse looking over their shoulder, getting the ceremony right matters even more — there is no second signer to corroborate your intent later.

Requirement What EPTL §3-2.1 Demands
Signature placement The testator must sign at the end of the will (or another person may sign 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 (a rebuttable presumption treats the requirement as met).
Publication The testator must declare the instrument to be their will.
Signing / acknowledgment The testator signs in the witnesses’ presence or acknowledges the signature to each witness.
Witness duties Witnesses sign at the testator’s request and add their residence addresses.

Miss one of these, and the document a court reviews after your death may not be honored as written. Because a will takes effect only at death and must be admitted to probate in the Surrogate’s Court, there is no chance to “fix it later.” See our NY will requirements and will execution pages for the full ceremony walkthrough.

“Living Will” Is Not the Document You Think

Many individuals search for a “living will” believing it controls their property. It does not. A living will is a health-care and end-of-life document that states your wishes about medical treatment if you cannot speak for yourself. It is entirely separate from a property will and does not direct who inherits your assets.

For the solo planner, both documents matter — but for different reasons. The property will (this site’s focus) governs your estate. The living will governs your care. Confusing the two is one of the most common — and most costly — mistakes individuals make.

The Individual’s Planning Checklist

Because you may not have an obvious heir or co-signer, a few decisions carry extra weight:

A Note on the Spousal Right of Election

Even if you are unmarried today, your circumstances can change. New York’s spousal right of election (EPTL 5-1.1-A) lets a surviving spouse claim a minimum share of an estate regardless of what the will says. If you marry after signing your will, this rule can quietly reshape your plan — another reason individuals should revisit their documents after a marriage. We flag this proactively so it never becomes an unwelcome surprise.

Frequently Asked Questions

I’m single with no children. Do I really need a will?
Yes — arguably more than anyone. Without one, EPTL Article 4 decides who inherits, and that order rarely matches what an individual actually wants. A will is how you keep that decision in your own hands.

Can my unmarried partner inherit without a will?
No. New York intestacy does not recognize unmarried partners. The only reliable way to provide for a partner is to name them in a valid will (and through other beneficiary designations).

How many witnesses does my will need?
At least two attesting witnesses, who must sign within one 30-day period and add their residence addresses, per EPTL §3-2.1.

Is a living will the same as my will?
No. A living will addresses medical and end-of-life care; your property will directs who inherits your estate. They are separate documents — see living will and intestacy (no will).

What happens to my will after I die?
It takes effect only at death and must be admitted to probate in the Surrogate’s Court, which validates the document and authorizes your executor to act.

Plan on Your Own Terms

You have built a life that is uniquely yours. Your estate plan should match it. Russel Morgan, Esq. and Morgan Legal Group draft individual-focused wills across New York State — clear, statute-compliant, and built around the people and causes you actually choose.

Start with our will drafting overview, then schedule a consultation to put your plan in place.

This page is general legal information, not legal advice. New York will execution is governed by EPTL §3-2.1; intestacy by EPTL Article 4.

Further reading from Morgan Legal Group: New York will execution requirements.