Not all signing appointments are equal. Before you book, understand how your choices stack up — because a single misstep under EPTL §3-2.1 can invalidate an otherwise sound estate plan.
Option-by-Option Comparison
| Approach | Key Advantage | Key Risk |
|---|---|---|
| Attorney-supervised signing | Counsel verifies every statutory requirement on the spot | Higher upfront cost |
| DIY with friends as witnesses | Convenient; no fee | Witnesses may be disqualified; publication step often skipped |
| Online notary service | Remote convenience | NY wills do not require notarization — wrong tool for the job |
What New York Law Actually Requires
Under EPTL §3-2.1, a valid New York will must satisfy all of the following — with no exceptions:
- Testator’s signature must appear at the end of the will (or be made by another person in the testator’s presence and at their direction).
- Publication: the testator must declare to the witnesses that the document is their will.
- Two attesting witnesses, each signing at the testator’s request and adding their residence address.
- Both witnesses must sign within a single 30-day period (a rebuttable presumption under the statute).
A failure at any step can send your estate to intestacy under EPTL Article 4, stripping your wishes entirely and forcing distribution to next of kin. And remember: a living will is a separate health-care document — it does not pass property and operates under entirely different rules.
The supervised attorney appointment eliminates ambiguity. You also gain insight into related protections like the spousal right of election (EPTL 5-1.1-A) and whether codicils or amendments may serve you better than a full redraft.
Ready to execute your will correctly the first time?
Book a 30-minute appointment with Russel Morgan, Esq.
Morgan Legal Group serves clients across New York State — including New York City, Long Island, Westchester, the Hudson Valley, and Upstate New York.
Further reading from Morgan Legal Group: New York will execution requirements.