Can I Write My Own Will?
Yes. You can legally write your own will, and a DIY or handwritten will is valid in most states if you are a competent adult and sign it with the witnesses your state requires, usually two. The bigger risk is not legality but mistakes, like improper signing or vague wording, that surface after death.
You do not need a lawyer to make a valid will. Every US state lets a competent adult write their own will, and as long as it meets that state’s signing and witnessing rules, it carries the same legal force as one drafted by an attorney. The price you pay, or do not pay, has nothing to do with whether the will is legally binding.
What actually makes a will valid is not who wrote it but how it is executed: you must be of legal age and sound mind, and you must sign it according to your state’s formalities. Get those steps right and your homemade will is enforceable. The real question is not “can I,” but “should I,” and that depends on how complicated your situation is. For the cost-and-risk comparison, see our guide on DIY will vs attorney.
Handwritten (Holographic) Wills
A fully handwritten, signed will is called a holographic will. About half of US states recognize them as valid even without witnesses, provided the important parts are in your own handwriting and signed. The other states do not accept them at all, and even where they are allowed, they are far more likely to be challenged or misread.
Because the rules vary so much by state, a handwritten will is the riskiest route. A typed will, printed and signed in front of the required witnesses, is valid everywhere and far less likely to cause problems. If you are going to write your own will, type it.
How to Do It Correctly
If you write your own will, the execution step is what counts. Follow these basics, then confirm the details for your state.
- Be a legal adult (18 in most states) and of sound mind when you sign.
- Clearly title the document as your last will and testament and state that it revokes earlier wills.
- Name your beneficiaries, an executor, and, if you have minor children, a guardian.
- Sign and date the will in front of the number of witnesses your state requires, usually two.
- Have the witnesses, who generally should not be beneficiaries, sign in your presence.
- Consider a notarized self-proving affidavit, which can speed up probate later.
- Store the original somewhere safe and tell your executor where it is.
Our step-by-step how to write a will guide walks through each of these in detail, and you can confirm your state’s specific witness rules on our state pages.
Improper signing or witnessing is the single most common reason a homemade will is thrown out. Follow your state’s execution rules exactly, even a small error can invalidate the whole document.
DIY, Online, or Attorney
Writing a will from scratch is only one option, and usually not the best one. A reputable online will maker costs little or nothing, walks you through the required clauses, and flags the signing steps, removing most of the risk of a from-scratch will for the same effort. For complex estates, an attorney is the safest choice.
Think of it as a spectrum: a from-scratch DIY will for the confident and simple, an online service for most people who want guidance cheaply, and an attorney for complicated situations. All three produce a legally valid will; they differ in how much help and protection you get.
The Risks to Avoid
The danger of writing your own will is not that it is illegal, it is that errors are easy to make and impossible to fix once you are gone. Vague or contradictory wording can spark family disputes. Missing assets fall outside the will. And a will that is never updated after a marriage, divorce, or new child can produce results you never intended.
Most importantly, a fully DIY will is poorly suited to complex situations. If you have a blended family, a business, property in several states, a beneficiary with special needs, or possible estate tax exposure, a homemade will can create expensive problems. In those cases, paying for professional help is the cheaper choice in the long run.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I write my own will?
Yes. You can legally write your own will, and a DIY or handwritten will is valid in most states if you are a competent adult and sign it with the witnesses your state requires, usually two. The bigger risk is not legality but mistakes, like improper signing or vague wording, that surface after death.
Is a handwritten will legal?
In about half of US states, a fully handwritten and signed will, called a holographic will, is valid even without witnesses. In the other states it is not. Because the rules vary, a typed will signed before the required witnesses is the safer choice everywhere.
Does a DIY will need to be notarized?
Generally no. A will is made valid by being signed and witnessed, not notarized. Many states let you add a notarized self-proving affidavit, which speeds up probate, but the notarization itself is optional in most places. Witnessing is the step that matters.
What makes a DIY will invalid?
The most common reasons are improper signing or witnessing, not meeting your state’s witness rules, unclear or contradictory wording, and failing to update it after major life changes. These errors usually surface only after death, when they cannot be fixed.
When should I not write my own will?
Avoid a fully DIY will if you have a large or complex estate, a blended family, a business, property in several states, a beneficiary with special needs, possible estate tax exposure, or you expect the will to be contested. In those cases an attorney is worth the cost.