Living Trust California

Honest Guide for Californians

DIY Living Trust California: Can You Write Your Own Trust?

Yes, you legally can—but should you? This guide examines the realities of DIY living trusts, the risks involved, and when self-preparation makes sense vs. when you need help.

Can you write your own living trust in California? Technically, yes—California law allows you to create your own living trust without an attorney. But should you? This guide examines the realities of DIY living trusts, the risks involved, and when self-preparation makes sense versus when you need professional help.

The Hard Truth: Living trust mistakes usually aren't discovered until after you die—when it's too late to fix them. Your family pays the price for errors you never knew you made.

Is a DIY Living Trust Legal in California?

Yes, it's completely legal. California has no requirement that a living trust be prepared by an attorney. You can:

However, legal doesn't mean advisable. Just because you can do something doesn't mean you should.

DIY Living Trust Options

Option Cost Attorney Review?
Online software (LegalZoom Basic) $399 No
Online software (LegalZoom Premium) $549 Yes
Trust & Will $599+ Optional (+$299)
Nolo software $179 No
Free online forms $0 No
State Bar self-help $0 No

What DIY Living Trust Software Gets Wrong About California Law

Online services use generic 50-state templates that often fail to account for California-specific requirements. Here's what they typically miss:

Common Template Problems:

Why "50-State" Templates Are a Red Flag:

When a service advertises "valid in all 50 states," that's actually a warning sign. Estate planning law varies dramatically by state. California has unique rules for:

A template designed to work everywhere often works well nowhere—it's too generic to address any state's specific requirements properly.

5 Common DIY Trust Mistakes That Invalidate Your Trust

These aren't just minor errors—they can completely invalidate your trust or cause it to fail when your family needs it most:

  1. Forgetting to Fund the Trust
    The #1 DIY mistake. Creating a trust is only step one—you must also transfer assets into the trust. An unfunded trust is worthless paper. Your house, bank accounts, and investments must be re-titled in the trust's name. DIY software creates documents but doesn't help with this critical step. Studies suggest up to 70% of DIY trusts are never properly funded.
  2. Improper Execution (Witnesses & Notarization)
    California has specific requirements for trust execution. While California doesn't require witnesses for a trust (unlike a will), proper notarization is critical for real estate transfers. Many DIY users make mistakes in the signing process that create ambiguity about the trust's validity. One missed notarization can mean your house still goes through probate.
  3. Invalid Trustee Succession Language
    Who takes over if your primary successor trustee can't serve? What if they've died, become incapacitated, or simply refuse? Generic templates often create ambiguous succession language that leads to costly court proceedings to determine who should manage the trust. Proper trust documents include clear fallback provisions.
  4. Missing Incapacity Definitions
    What happens if you're alive but incapacitated? When can your successor trustee step in? DIY trusts often lack clear standards for determining incapacity, creating a legal gray zone where no one has authority to act. Meanwhile, bills go unpaid and investments go unmanaged.
  5. Community Property Mischaracterization
    California is a community property state. This means married couples own most assets acquired during marriage 50/50. Generic templates designed for common law states often mishandle community property, which can trigger unintended tax consequences or partial probate when the first spouse dies.

More DIY Mistakes That Cause Problems

  1. Missing the Pour-Over Will
    A living trust needs a companion "pour-over will" to catch any assets not transferred to the trust before death. Many DIY users don't realize this is a separate document. Without it, assets outside the trust go through probate—exactly what you were trying to avoid.
  2. Outdated Digital Asset Provisions
    Modern estate plans need provisions for cryptocurrency, online accounts, social media, and digital assets. Most DIY templates are outdated and don't address these increasingly valuable assets. California's Revised Uniform Fiduciary Access to Digital Assets Act requires specific language to give your trustee access.

When DIY Might Actually Work

DIY could be acceptable if ALL of these criteria apply to your situation:

Reality check: If you own a home in California, you've already exceeded $200,000 in assets—the median home price is over $800,000 statewide. Most Californians don't actually qualify for "simple" DIY situations. If you meet the criteria above, you might also qualify for California's simplified small estate procedures without a trust at all.

Consider This: If your estate is truly simple enough for DIY, you might not need a trust at all. California allows simplified probate procedures (under Probate Code 13100) for estates under $184,500. A trust makes sense when you have assets worth protecting—and those assets deserve proper legal protection.

When You Absolutely Need Professional Help

Do NOT DIY If You:

DIY Living Trust Cost vs Professional Help

Option Cost What You Get
Free online forms $0 Generic forms, no guidance, high risk
Nolo software $179 Software-generated, no attorney review
LegalZoom Basic $399 Generic templates, NO attorney review
LegalZoom Premium $549 Templates WITH attorney review
Living Trust California $400 California-specific, attorney-reviewed
Traditional attorney $1,500-$3,000 Full custom drafting and consultation

The Middle Ground: Attorney-Reviewed at DIY Prices

What if you could get the convenience of online software with actual attorney oversight? That's exactly what we offer—a middle ground between risky DIY and expensive traditional attorneys.

Living Trust California: The Best of Both Worlds

For just $400 (individuals) or $500 (couples), you get:

Why This Works Better Than Pure DIY:

Our approach combines online convenience with professional oversight:

Bottom line: For $1 more than LegalZoom's Basic plan (which has NO attorney review), you get a California attorney to actually review your trust. For $149 LESS than LegalZoom's Premium plan, you get the same attorney oversight plus California-specific expertise. That's the peace of mind DIY simply can't provide.

Frequently Asked Questions About DIY Trusts

Q: Is a DIY living trust legal in California?

A: Yes, it's completely legal to create your own living trust without an attorney. California has no requirement for attorney involvement. However, "legal" doesn't mean "advisable"—mistakes in DIY trusts often aren't discovered until after death, when it's too late to fix them and your family pays the price.

Q: What are the biggest risks of DIY living trusts?

A: The biggest risks are: (1) forgetting to fund the trust (an unfunded trust is worthless), (2) incorrect execution that invalidates the document, (3) missing California-specific provisions like community property rules, and (4) improper trustee succession language that creates costly family conflicts.

Q: Can I use LegalZoom for a living trust?

A: You can, but understand the limitations. LegalZoom is not a law firm and cannot provide legal advice. Their Basic plan ($399) has NO attorney review—it's pure software generating generic 50-state templates. Their Premium plan ($549) adds attorney review but still uses the same generic templates.

Q: When should I NOT do a DIY living trust?

A: Avoid DIY if you: own California real estate, have minor children, are married (community property issues), are in a blended family, own a business, have out-of-state property, have special needs beneficiaries, or have assets worth more than $200,000.

Q: What's the cheapest way to get a proper living trust?

A: Living Trust California offers attorney-reviewed trusts for $400 (individuals) or $500 (couples)—cheaper than LegalZoom Premium ($549/$649) and with California-specific expertise rather than generic templates.

Q: What is "trust funding" and why is it important?

A: Trust funding means transferring your assets into the trust's name. This includes retitling your home deed, changing bank account ownership, and updating beneficiary designations. An unfunded trust provides zero probate protection—it's the most critical step that DIY users miss.

Q: Can I fix a DIY trust that has problems?

A: Yes, during your lifetime you can amend or completely redo a revocable living trust. However, many problems aren't discovered until after death. It's generally cheaper to do it right the first time than to fix problems later—or worse, leave your family with a defective trust.

Q: Are free living trust forms from the internet safe to use?

A: Free forms are the riskiest option. They're often outdated, legally questionable, or completely generic. Even if they create a technically valid document, they won't address California-specific issues or help you properly fund the trust. The potential cost of probate (4-8% of estate value) far exceeds the cost of professional help.

Skip the DIY Risk. Get Attorney Review for $400.

Same price as DIY software, but with actual California attorney oversight. Don't leave your family's future to generic templates.

Get Started — $400

Attorney-reviewed | California Bar #208356 | 24-48 hour delivery

Related Guides

LegalZoom Cost Breakdown

What LegalZoom really charges for trusts

Compare All Services

Full comparison of online trust services

Living Trust Cost Guide

Complete pricing breakdown for California

Attorney Rozsa Gyene

Legal Review By

Rozsa Gyene, Esq.

California State Bar #208356 | Licensed Since 2000

25+ years estate planning experience in California