Creating a will for the first time can feel overwhelming. This page is your starting point: a plain-English map of what to expect before, during, and after your appointment with Morgan Legal Group — serving clients across New York City, Long Island, Westchester, the Hudson Valley, and Upstate New York.
What New York Law Actually Requires
A valid New York will is governed by EPTL §3-2.1. The essentials come down to five checkpoints:
| Requirement | The Plain-English Version |
|---|---|
| Testator’s signature | You sign at the end of the document (or direct someone to sign in your presence) |
| Publication | You declare aloud — to witnesses — that this is your will |
| Two attesting witnesses | At least two people must witness your signature or your acknowledgment of it |
| 30-day signing window | Both witnesses must sign within a single 30-day period |
| Witness addresses | Each witness adds their residential address below their signature |
Miss any one of these and the document may not survive Surrogate’s Court probate review.
Why a First-Timer Appointment Matters
- Intestacy risk. Dying without a will means EPTL Article 4 decides who inherits — not you.
- Spousal protection. Even with a will, a surviving spouse can assert a right of election under EPTL 5-1.1-A. We explain how that interacts with your plan.
- Common mix-ups clarified. A living will is a health-care directive — a completely separate document. We make sure you know the difference before you sign anything.
After your appointment you will understand NY will requirements, execution day, options like codicils, and what happens if you ever need intestacy guidance.
Book your free 30-minute appointment →
Russel Morgan, Esq. — Morgan Legal Group — New York State
Further reading from Morgan Legal Group: key things to know about writing a will.