To draft a valid will in New York State, you must follow EPTL §3-2.1: the will must be in writing and signed at the end by you (the testator), you must declare to the witnesses that the document is your will, and at least two attesting witnesses must sign it within a single 30-day window after watching you sign or hearing you acknowledge your signature. Miss one of these formalities and a New York Surrogate’s Court can refuse to admit the document to probate — which means your estate may pass under the intestacy rules instead of your actual wishes. This page walks through every requirement, statewide, so the document you draft today survives scrutiny tomorrow.
Morgan Legal Group, led by attorney Russel Morgan, Esq., drafts and supervises will executions for clients across New York State. Below is the same checklist our attorneys use when we sit down to build an estate plan.
The Five Core Execution Requirements Under EPTL §3-2.1
New York does not recognize a “loose” or informal will. The statute that controls how a will must be created and signed is Estates, Powers and Trusts Law (EPTL) §3-2.1, and it imposes five distinct formalities. Think of them as five doors that all must open before a will is valid.
| # | Requirement | What the statute demands |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Writing & signature | The will must be in writing and signed by the testator at the end of the document. Another person may sign for the testator, but only in the testator’s presence and at their direction. |
| 2 | Signature at the end | Anything written after the signature may be disregarded. The signature anchors the document. |
| 3 | Publication (declaration) | The testator must declare to the attesting witnesses that the instrument is their last will. The witnesses must understand they are witnessing a will. |
| 4 | Two attesting witnesses | At least two witnesses must sign. They sign at the testator’s request, and the statute asks each to add their residence address (the omission of an address does not by itself void the will). |
| 5 | 30-day window | Both witnesses must sign within one 30-day period. New York applies a rebuttable presumption that the 30-day requirement was met, but a careful execution removes any doubt. |
Why the “end of the will” rule matters
The requirement that you sign at the end is not a technicality. Under EPTL §3-2.1, provisions appearing below your signature can be treated as if they were never written. We draft so the dispositive clauses — who receives what — always sit above your signature line, with the witness attestation block immediately following.
Who should witness your will
Your witnesses should be disinterested adults — people who do not stand to inherit under the will. While New York will not automatically invalidate a will signed by an interested witness, a beneficiary-witness can jeopardize their own gift. Choosing neutral witnesses keeps the document clean and harder to challenge in the Surrogate’s Court.
What the Witnesses Actually Do
A valid New York will execution is a short, structured ceremony. Done correctly, it looks like this:
- You confirm you are signing freely and are of sound mind.
- You declare aloud that “this is my last will and testament” (publication).
- You sign at the end of the document while both witnesses watch — or you acknowledge an earlier signature to them.
- Each witness signs at your request and writes their residence address.
- Both witness signatures land inside the same 30-day period.
Many attorneys, including ours, pair the execution with a self-proving affidavit. This sworn statement, signed by the witnesses before a notary, lets the will be admitted to probate later without tracking down the witnesses years afterward. It is not required by EPTL §3-2.1, but it is one of the most practical safeguards you can add.
Codicils: Amending a Will the Right Way
Life changes — a new child, a divorce, a sold property. When you want to amend an existing will rather than rewrite it, you use a codicil. A codicil is a formally executed amendment, and here is the part people miss: it must satisfy the exact same EPTL §3-2.1 formalities as the original will — writing, signature at the end, publication, two witnesses, and the 30-day window.
You cannot simply cross out a line or staple a handwritten note. An informal mark-up can invalidate the change and, in some cases, raise questions about the will itself. For substantial revisions, drafting a fresh will that revokes all prior wills is often cleaner than layering codicils on top of one another.
Last Will vs. Living Will: Two Different Documents
These two documents are frequently confused because they share a word.
- A last will and testament directs how your property is distributed after death and names an executor (and guardians for minor children). It is governed by EPTL §3-2.1.
- A living will is an advance directive for end-of-life care — it states your wishes about life-sustaining treatment while you are still alive but unable to communicate. It does not distribute any property.
A complete New York estate plan usually includes both, along with a health care proxy and a power of attorney. Drafting only one leaves a gap.
What Happens With No Valid Will: New York Intestacy
If you die without a valid will — or your will fails the EPTL §3-2.1 formalities — New York’s intestacy rules under EPTL Article 4 decide who inherits. The law distributes your estate to your next of kin in a fixed statutory order, regardless of what you would have wanted:
- Spouse and children: the spouse receives the first $50,000 plus half the remainder; the children share the other half.
- Spouse, no children: the spouse inherits everything.
- Children, no spouse: the children inherit everything in equal shares.
- No spouse or children: the estate passes to parents, then siblings, then more remote relatives.
Intestacy ignores stepchildren, unmarried partners, friends, and charities entirely. A properly drafted will is the only way to override these defaults.
New York Estate Tax in 2026: Mind the Cliff
Drafting a will is also your first opportunity to plan around New York’s estate tax — and New York has a feature that surprises many families: the estate tax cliff.
For 2026, the New York basic exclusion amount is $7,350,000. Estates valued at or below that figure owe no New York estate tax. But the exemption phases out fast. Once an estate exceeds 105% of the exclusion — $7,717,500 — it loses the entire exemption and is taxed from the first dollar. New York estate tax rates run from 3% to 16%.
| Estate value (2026) | New York estate tax treatment |
|---|---|
| At or below $7,350,000 | No New York estate tax |
| Between $7,350,000 and $7,717,500 | Partial exemption — phasing out (the “cliff” zone) |
| Above $7,717,500 | Entire exemption lost; taxed from dollar one (rates 3%–16%) |
For families near these thresholds, the difference between a will drafted with the cliff in mind and one drafted without it can be hundreds of thousands of dollars. Credit-shelter planning, lifetime gifting, and trust structures are all tools we evaluate during the drafting process. You can confirm current figures directly with the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance.
A Practical Drafting Checklist
Before you sign anything, confirm you have:
- A written document naming an executor and, if you have minor children, a guardian.
- Clear dispositive clauses — who gets what — all positioned above your signature.
- Your signature at the end, made in front of both witnesses.
- Two disinterested witnesses who sign within the same 30-day window and add their addresses.
- A self-proving affidavit notarized at the execution (recommended).
- Companion documents: a living will, health care proxy, and power of attorney.
This is also where professional drafting earns its keep. The Surrogate’s Court reviews wills after you are gone and cannot ask you what you meant. A will built to EPTL §3-2.1 standards from the start is the most reliable gift you can leave your family.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many witnesses does a New York will require?
At least two attesting witnesses. Under EPTL §3-2.1, both must sign within a single 30-day period, signing at the testator’s request after the testator declares the document to be their will.
Does a New York will have to be notarized?
No. Notarization is not a legal requirement for a valid will under EPTL §3-2.1. However, attorneys strongly recommend pairing the execution with a notarized self-proving affidavit so the will can be probated later without locating the witnesses.
Can I just handwrite changes onto my existing will?
No. Amendments must be made through a properly executed codicil that meets the same EPTL §3-2.1 formalities — writing, signature at the end, publication, two witnesses, and the 30-day window. Handwritten edits can invalidate the change.
What happens if I die without a will in New York?
Your estate is distributed under New York’s intestacy statute, EPTL Article 4, which passes property to your next of kin in a fixed order — spouse, children, parents, siblings, and so on. Partners, stepchildren, and charities receive nothing.
Will my estate owe New York estate tax in 2026?
Estates at or below the $7,350,000 basic exclusion owe no New York estate tax. Estates above the $7,717,500 cliff lose the entire exemption and are taxed from the first dollar at rates of 3% to 16%.
Draft Your New York Will With Confidence
A will is only as strong as its execution. Morgan Legal Group, led by Russel Morgan, Esq., drafts wills, codicils, and complete estate plans for clients across New York State — built to satisfy every EPTL §3-2.1 requirement and to plan around the 2026 estate tax cliff.
Schedule a free 30-minute consultation to start drafting your will the right way: https://calendly.com/russel-morgan/30min.
Further reading from Morgan Legal Group: the last will and testament in New York.