Getting my husband to make a will and a guardianship plan was not fun. He hates thinking about end of life stuff, whereas I remind him every 6 months (whenever I see the dentist) to make sure he asks the undertaker for the gold out of my mouth.
See also life insurance discussions.
And I just now realized that I put my post in the wrong thread. Oops.
I really really need to get a will done.
The Knight costume is for me, not mac, just in case anyone does have one, or even a helmet.
For folks living in Virginia, my sister says that Virginia courts accept handwritten wills as binding.
Why would handwriting make a document unbinding?
It's not that handwriting makes it unbinding, it's -- eh. As I understand it (not a lawyer), some states require wills to be done formally, with a lawyer, or a notary, or a legal form. In Virginia, a handwritten will is good enough. Whether this is true in other states, I don't know; it may be. My sister told me this when she was encouraging me to write a will, which I still haven't done.
So, I don't get it. If I handwrite a will with a lawyer and a notary, shouldn't it be just fine? What's the difference with Virginia? Are you saying they don't need a lawyer and a notary?
It sounds like it means I could write my will, sign it and date it, and put it in a drawer until I die, and it would hold up. Which is good to know, if you live in VA, and probably not true anymore in many other places.