Last updated June 27, 2026 · Reviewed by Neil Alan Milestone, The Florida Bar No. 309966
Not sure where to start? A free role check points you to the right next step.
Start the free role checkThe building blocks of a Florida Estate Plan
A Florida will
A will directs who receives your property and names a personal representative, but it generally must pass through Florida probate to take effect. It can also name guardians for minor children.
A revocable living Trust
A revocable living Trust holds your assets during life and passes them to your beneficiaries at death — generally outside probate — while you keep full control and can change it anytime. It is an administration and probate-avoidance tool, not asset protection.
Probate
Probate is the court-supervised process of settling a decedent's estate — proving the will, paying creditors, and distributing what remains. Florida offers formal and summary administration depending on the estate, and many plans aim to reduce or avoid it.
Asset protection
Florida offers meaningful protections — homestead, tenancy by the entireties, and exemptions for certain life insurance, annuities, and retirement accounts — but they depend on facts, timing, and titling, and a revocable Trust does not by itself shield assets from creditors. This is an area to review with a Florida attorney.
Powers of attorney & advance directives
A complete plan usually also includes a durable power of attorney, a health care surrogate designation, and a living will — so someone you trust can act for you if you cannot.
Which plan is right in Florida?
There is no single best plan for everyone — the right mix of will, Trust, and directives depends on your assets, your family, and your goals. This page is general information, not legal advice. A free role check can point you to the right next step, and a Florida attorney can recommend what fits your situation.
Related reading
- Florida will vs. revocable living trust →
- The Florida revocable living trust, explained →
- The Florida irrevocable trust, explained →
- Types of trusts in Florida →
- Florida probate, explained →
- How to avoid probate in Florida →
- The Florida lady bird deed, explained →
- Summary vs. formal probate administration →
- Florida will requirements (§732.502) →
- Florida homestead exemption & inheritance →
- The Florida elective share (spouse’s 30%) →
- Does Florida have an estate tax? →
- The Florida durable power of attorney →
- How much does probate cost in Florida? →
- How much does a living trust cost? →
- EstateDraftFL vs. LegalZoom for Florida →
- How much does estate planning cost in Florida? →
- Florida estate planning glossary →
- Dying without a will in Florida (intestacy) →
- Florida powers of attorney & advance directives →
- Florida asset protection: the basics →
Free Florida tools
- Do I need probate in Florida? (checker) →
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General information about Florida law, not legal advice.
Frequently asked questions
- Do I need a will or a trust in Florida?
- It depends on your goals. Generally, a will directs your property but must pass through Florida probate; a revocable living trust can pass assets to beneficiaries outside probate while you keep full control during life. Many Florida plans use both. Which fits you is a question for a Florida attorney — this is general information, not legal advice.
- How do I avoid probate in Florida?
- Common probate-avoidance tools in Florida include a funded revocable living trust, beneficiary or pay-on-death designations, and jointly titled property — but each has trade-offs and depends on how assets are titled. A Florida attorney can review what fits your estate.
- Does a revocable living trust protect assets from creditors in Florida?
- Generally no. A revocable living trust is an administration and probate-avoidance tool; because you keep control, its assets are generally still reachable by your creditors during life. Florida asset protection (homestead, tenancy by the entireties, certain exemptions) is a separate, fact-specific area to review with a Florida attorney.
- What documents are in a typical Florida Estate Plan?
- Generally, a will and/or a revocable living trust, a durable power of attorney, a health care surrogate designation, and a living will. The right combination depends on your assets, family, and goals.
General information about Florida law, not legal advice.