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West Virginia Estate Plan

A complete West Virginia estate plan is more than a will. It is the set of documents — Last Will, Living Trust, Durable Power of Attorney, Medical Power of Attorney, Directive to Physicians, HIPAA Authorization, and the supporting paperwork West Virginia courts and hospitals expect to see — that together decide who inherits what, who raises your kids, who pays your bills if you can't, and who speaks to your doctors when you can't.

  • Built around West Virginia's own statutes
  • Five-minute questionnaire, instant PDF download
  • One-time fee — no subscription, no auto-renew
  • Regenerate the binder from your dashboard if life changes
Reserve my spot for West Virginia → Or get the $49 Universal bundle today

About the West Virginia estate plan

Most West Virginia families don't need a $1,500 attorney appointment to put this in place. They need a clean, West Virginia-compliant binder that covers the formalities the West Virginia Estates Code looks for and a checklist that walks them through signing, witnessing, and notarizing it. That is exactly what we build — in five minutes, online, for a one-time fee.

Both plans are anchored by the same set of estate-planning documents — a Last Will, a Revocable Living Trust, a Durable Power of Attorney, a Medical Power of Attorney, a Directive to Physicians, a HIPAA Authorization, and the supporting paperwork your West Virginia witnesses and notary will expect. The Premium plan adds the extra documents homeowners and families with significant personal property typically want alongside the trust.

Everything is generated as printable PDFs you can sign in front of two witnesses and a West Virginia notary. There is no subscription, no recurring charge, and no attorney waiting room — and you can regenerate the binder from your dashboard if you need to fix a typo or update a beneficiary.

West Virginia: Core vs Premium

Both plans are a one-time fee — no subscription, no auto-renew.

Core — Get It Done

Essential trust documents

$499 one-time

  • Revocable Living Trust (Trust Agreement)
  • Certificate of Trust
  • Warranty Deed
  • Cover Letter to County Clerk
  • Last Will
  • Durable Power of Attorney
  • Medical Power of Attorney
  • Directive to Physicians
  • HIPAA Authorization
  • HIPAA Authorization for adult children (age 18+)
  • Declaration of Guardian (one per child)
  • Notary Guide
  • Execution Checklist

Includes 3 regenerations.

Premium — I Need This Done Right

Complete estate package with bonus documents

$699 one-time

  • Everything in Core
  • Assignment of Personal Property
  • Personal Property Memorandum
  • Amendment to Trustee (3 forms)

Includes 5 regenerations.

Reserve my spot for West Virginia →

West Virginia launches soon — what you can do today

Our full West Virginia estate-planning binder isn't live yet. Reserve your spot above and you'll be the first to know when it launches. In the meantime, three of our documents work in every state today — HIPAA Authorization, Execution Checklist, and Notary Guide — bundled together for $49.

Get the Universal Documents bundle →

West Virginia estate plan — common questions

Both the Core ($499) and Premium ($699) plans include the complete set of West Virginia estate-planning documents most families need: Last Will, Revocable Living Trust, Certificate of Trust, Durable Power of Attorney, Medical Power of Attorney, Directive to Physicians, HIPAA Authorization (for you and for your adult children), Declaration of Guardian for minor children, and the Notary Guide and Execution Checklist that walk you through signing the binder. Premium adds an Assignment of Personal Property, Personal Property Memorandum, and Amendment-to-Trustee forms.

Every document is built around the West Virginia statutes that govern it — the West Virginia Estates Code for the will, the West Virginia Property Code for the trust, the West Virginia statutory durable power-of-attorney form, and the West Virginia medical power-of-attorney form. The Notary Guide and Execution Checklist are also West Virginia-specific because witness and notary rules vary by state.

The documents themselves cover the same ground for a typical West Virginia family — will, trust, financial POA, medical POA, directive, HIPAA. What you skip is the intake meeting, the second meeting, and the printing-and-binding fee. For complicated estates (business succession, special-needs trust, multi-state property), an attorney review is still the right call — but most West Virginia adults don't have those situations.

No — you can start with Core today and upgrade to Premium any time from your dashboard for the difference in price ($200). The upgrade simply unlocks the additional Premium-only documents in the same binder; you don't lose anything you've already filled in.

One-time fee. There is no recurring charge, no monthly membership, and no auto-renew. You pay once, you download the binder, and you keep it. You can regenerate the documents from your dashboard a few times within the same plan if you need to fix a typo or update a beneficiary.

Reserve your spot above and you'll be the first to know the moment the full West Virginia binder goes live. In the meantime, the $49 Universal Documents bundle (HIPAA Authorization, Notary Guide, Execution Checklist) works in West Virginia today because HIPAA is a federal rule and the supporting docs are state-agnostic.

Ready to put your West Virginia estate plan in place?

One-time fee. No subscriptions. Generated in 5 minutes.

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