Estate Planning Attorney in Wayne, PA
Estate Planning Attorney in Pennsylvania
At Chadwick Estate Law, we make estate planning should be clear, personal, and efficient. Based in Wayne, PA and serving families across Chester, Delaware, Montgomery, and Philadelphia Counties, and statewide via Zoom, we help you create a plan that protects your family, your assets and honor your wishes.
Our services cover the essentials, wills, powers of attorney, and advance directives, as well as advanced strategies to minimize tax exposure and safeguard your legacy. Whether you are a young family creating your first plan, a retiree updating documents, or an executor seeking guidance, we deliver practical solutions with clarity and care.
With a Georgetown LL.M. in Taxation and AmLaw 100 experience, Bass Chadwick delivers national-level sophistication with the accessibility of a boutique practice. Whether you’re writing your first will, updating old documents, or coordinating a trust-based plan, you’ll leave with a strategy you understand.
What Estate Planning Covers (and Why It Matters)
Estate planning is more than “making a will.” It’s a coordinated set of documents and titling decisions that keep your wishes, instead of court defaults, at the center.
Wills in Pennsylvania - A will is the foundation of every estate plan. It appoints an executor to administer your estate, directs how your assets will be distributed, names guardians for minor children, and reduces uncertainty for your loved ones. Learn More About Wills in Pennsylvania
Financial Power of Attorney in Pennsylvania - Authorize a trusted person to act on your behalf if you are unable to. Without valid POAs, loved ones may need to seek guardianship—a stressful and costly court process. Learn More About Powers of Attorney
Health Care Power of Attorney, Living Wills & Advance Directives - State your medical preferences clearly so your family isn’t forced to guess in a crisis. Learn More About Health Care Power of Attorney
Beneficiary Designations & Titling - Coordinate your plan with account beneficiaries (IRA/401(k)/life insurance) and property titles (e.g., deed, joint ownership) so everything works together.
Our Estate Planning Process
Initial Consultation
Book a complimentary consultation with an estate planning attorney to discuss your goals and develop a personalized plan that protects your family and legacy.
Design & Drafting
Meet with your estate planning attorney to design a customized plan that reflects your priorities, values, and long-term objectives.
Review & Revisions
You’ll review your draft documents and meet with us (virtually or in-office) to discuss any adjustments. We revise the plan until every provision reflects your intent.
Signing & Execution
We coordinate the execution of your estate planning documents to ensure full compliance with Pennsylvania law, including the presence of required witnesses and notarization where applicable.
What Makes Estate Planning Different in Pennsylvania
Why Pennsylvania Families Face Unique Planning Challenges
Pennsylvania is one of only six states that still imposes its own inheritance tax — and unlike the federal estate tax, which only applies to very large estates, Pennsylvania's inheritance tax applies to nearly everyone. Understanding how it works is an essential part of building a plan that protects what you've built.
Pennsylvania charges inheritance tax at rates that depend on your relationship to the beneficiary:
- 0% — surviving spouses and children under 21
- 4.5% — direct descendants (adult children, grandchildren)
- 12% — siblings
- 15% — all other beneficiaries, including unmarried partners, nieces, nephews, and friends
This structure has real planning implications. Leaving assets to a sibling or an unmarried partner without planning can trigger a tax bill of 12–15% on the value of those assets. Proper beneficiary designations, trust structures, and gifting strategies can significantly reduce this exposure — but only if your plan accounts for it in advance.
Pennsylvania's intestate succession laws add another layer of complexity. If you die without a will, the Commonwealth distributes your assets according to a fixed statutory formula that does not recognize stepchildren, unmarried partners, or close friends — no matter how central they were to your life. A properly drafted estate plan ensures that the people you care about most are the ones who benefit.
Estate Planning at Every Life Stage
When Is the Right Time to Create an Estate Plan?
The honest answer: earlier than most people think.
Estate planning is not just for retirees or the wealthy. It is for anyone who has a family to protect, assets to distribute, or preferences about their own healthcare in an emergency. Here is what estate planning typically looks like at each stage of life:
Newly Married
Marriage changes your legal status overnight, but it does not automatically update your beneficiary designations, retirement accounts, or existing will. Many newly married couples discover that assets are still flowing to an ex-partner or a parent. A post-marriage estate plan update ensures your spouse is protected and your documents reflect your current life.
New Parents
The most urgent reason for parents of young children to have a will is the guardianship designation. Without it, a court — not you — decides who raises your children if both parents die. An estate plan also creates a structure for managing assets on behalf of minor children rather than handing them a lump sum at age 18.
Mid-Career Professionals
As income and assets grow, so does the complexity of planning. Life insurance, retirement accounts, real estate, and business interests all have different rules for transfer at death. Coordinating these within a cohesive plan prevents gaps, reduces taxes, and avoids probate where possible.
Pre-Retirement and Retirees
This is typically the stage where estate plans become most sophisticated. Revocable trusts, Medicaid planning, charitable giving strategies, and generational wealth transfer all become relevant. An existing plan drafted decades earlier almost certainly needs to be updated to reflect current law, current assets, and current family circumstances.
Business Owners
A business interest that passes without a succession plan can create chaos for co-owners, employees, and family members. Proper planning includes buy-sell agreements, succession documents, and structures that allow the business to continue operating — or be sold — on your terms rather than the court's.
What Estate Planning Actually Prevents
The Real Cost of Not Having a Plan
Most people delay estate planning because it feels abstract — something for later. But the costs of not planning are concrete and often fall hardest on the people you care most about.
Court-appointed guardianship.
Without a valid power of attorney, a family member cannot legally make financial or healthcare decisions for you if you become incapacitated. They must petition the Orphans' Court for guardianship — a process that takes time, costs money, and plays out publicly while your health situation is already in crisis.
Probate delays.
Estates without a proper plan, or with assets that aren't titled correctly, often sit in probate for a year or more. During that time, beneficiaries may not have access to funds, property cannot be sold, and administrative costs accumulate.
Unintended beneficiaries.
Retirement accounts and life insurance policies transfer by beneficiary designation — not by will. If you haven't updated those designations after a divorce, remarriage, or the death of a named beneficiary, the money may go somewhere you never intended.
Family disputes.
Ambiguous documents or no documents at all are the primary trigger for estate litigation. Will contests, beneficiary disputes, and executor removal proceedings are expensive, time-consuming, and permanently damaging to family relationships.
Pennsylvania inheritance tax exposure.
Without planning, assets may transfer to beneficiaries in ways that maximize tax liability rather than minimize it. Strategic gifting, trust structures, and beneficiary designations can reduce this burden significantly — but only if the plan is in place before it's needed.
A clear, current estate plan doesn't just protect your assets. It protects your family from having to make difficult decisions under the worst possible circumstances, without guidance from you.
Estate Planning Frequently Asked Questions in Pennsylvania
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Strictly speaking, no one is required to have a will in Pennsylvania but having one gives you control over the most important decisions after your passing. A will allows you to appoint an executor to handle your estate, name guardians for minor children, and designate trustees to manage assets left in trust. If you do not make these choices yourself, the Pennsylvania Orphans’ Court or the local Register of Wills will appoint someone for you. That process can be costly, time-consuming, and may place responsibility in the hands of people you would not have chosen. Drafting a will ensures your wishes, not the court’s defaults, govern how your estate is managed.
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Many people wonder, “What happens if I die without a will in Pennsylvania?” The answer is that the Commonwealth already has one for you. Under Pennsylvania’s intestate succession laws, your estate is distributed by consanguinity (degree of blood relation). Assets typically pass to a spouse and children first, then parents, siblings, and more distant relatives. While this system provides a basic framework, it ignores personal relationships (including stepchildren or unmarried partners) and can create unintended tax or administrative burdens. In short, the state’s “one-size-fits-all” plan rarely reflects what families truly want. A properly drafted will ensures your choices, not statutory defaults, determine the outcome. Do I need a will in Pennsylvania?
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A will and a living trust both transfer assets, but they work in very different ways. A will only takes effect after death and must go through the probate process, which involves court oversight and can take months. A living trust, by contrast, is effective immediately and allows assets placed into it to pass directly to beneficiaries outside of probate. Trusts can also provide added protection, such as shielding assets for children or planning for special needs. However, most families still need a will alongside a trust to cover guardianship appointments and any assets not placed into the trust. At Chadwick Estate Law, we explain the advantages of each and help you decide what combination is best for your family.
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In Pennsylvania, any competent adult can serve as your agent under a power of attorney (POA). Most people choose a spouse, adult child, relative, or trusted friend. Because your agent may control your finances or make healthcare decisions if you cannot, it is crucial to select someone responsible and trustworthy. POAs can be broad or limited in scope, nd they can be durable (continuing even if you become incapacitated) or springing (beginning after some predetermined event, such as incapacity). If you do not have a valid POA, your loved ones may need to petition the Orphans’ Court for guardianship — a process that is more expensive, stressful, and time-consuming. Properly drafted POAs ensure continuity and peace of mind.
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Estate plans should be reviewed every 2–3 years and updated after major life changes, such as marriage, divorce, the birth of a child, the death of a beneficiary, or a significant shift in assets. Changes in tax law can also make updates necessary. Outdated documents can lead to confusion, disputes, or even court challenges. For example, an old will that names a deceased executor or guardian can delay administration. At Chadwick Estate Law, we help families keep their estate plans current so they continue to provide the intended protection and efficiency.
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Pennsylvania does not impose a separate state estate tax. However, Pennsylvania does impose an inheritance tax on assets transferred at death, with rates ranging from 0% (for transfers to spouses and young children) to 15% (for transfers to unrelated beneficiaries). Federal estate tax may also apply to very large estates, though the federal exemption is currently high enough that most Pennsylvania families are not affected.
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Technically yes — Pennsylvania law does not require an attorney to draft a will. However, self-drafted wills that fail to meet Pennsylvania's execution requirements (proper witnessing, signatures, and formalities under 20 Pa.C.S. § 2502) are invalid. An invalid will is treated the same as no will at all, which means your estate passes under intestate succession regardless of your intentions. The cost of having documents professionally drafted is almost always less than the cost of fixing a flawed document after the fact — or in some cases, that cost cannot be remedied at all.
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Online services can generate basic documents, but they are not designed to account for Pennsylvania-specific laws, inheritance tax planning, or the specific circumstances of your family and assets. They also cannot advise you on whether a will, trust, or combination of documents is the right approach for your situation — or ensure your documents are properly executed under Pennsylvania law. For families with minor children, blended family situations, business interests, or meaningful assets, a customized plan drafted by a Pennsylvania estate planning attorney provides substantially more protection.
Areas We Serve
We proudly serve Wayne, the Main Line, and greater Philadelphia, everywhere in Philadelphia, Chester, Delaware, Montgomery, Bucks and Berks Counties as well as virtually statewide.
Wayne, Bryn Mawr, Villanova, Radnor, St. Davids, Devon, Berwyn, Paoli, Malvern, Newtown Square, Ardmore, Haverford, Havertown, Media, West Chester, King of Prussia, Conshohocken, Lafayette Hill, Blue Bell, Phoenixville, Gladwyne, Bala Cynwyd, Lower Merion, Upper Merion.