Asking what estate planning costs in Florida is reasonable, but the more useful question is what it costs to do it wrong. The biggest expenses in Florida estate planning are almost never the attorney’s fee — they are the probate, litigation, and tax consequences of a plan that fails. Here is how to think about cost without the false economies.
What You Are Actually Paying For
A typical Florida plan involves a fixed fee for a defined package rather than an hourly meter. The package usually includes a will, durable power of attorney, health care surrogate, living will, and HIPAA authorization. A plan built around a revocable living trust (Ch. 736) costs more because it involves drafting the trust and funding it — retitling accounts and preparing deeds. Fees vary by attorney and complexity, so the right move is to ask for a flat quote and a clear scope before you commit.
Mistake 1: Choosing DIY to Save a Few Hundred Dollars
Online templates look cheap until they collide with Florida-specific rules. A will not executed with two witnesses is invalid here (§732.502). A generic durable power of attorney can be rejected by Florida banks because it lacks the enumerated powers Ch. 709 requires. A homestead devise that violates Art. X, §4 can be void. The savings evaporate the moment a document fails and the family ends up in court.
Mistake 2: Ignoring the Cost of Probate
The real comparison is not ‘attorney fee vs. zero.’ It is ‘planning fee now vs. probate later.’ Florida formal administration involves court costs, a personal representative, and attorney involvement, and it can take many months. Florida statutes recognize a reasonable attorney fee for estate administration that is often calculated as a percentage of the estate’s value — meaning a larger estate can generate a substantial probate bill that thoughtful planning may have reduced or avoided.
Mistake 3: Overbuilding for Taxes You Do Not Owe
Florida has no state estate tax and no inheritance tax. Plenty of people pay for elaborate tax structures aimed at a Florida death tax that does not exist. Unless your estate approaches the federal estate tax threshold, your money is better spent on a clean, funded plan that avoids probate and protects your homestead.
Mistake 4: Buying a Trust You Never Fund
Paying for a revocable trust and then leaving assets in your own name is one of the most expensive mistakes possible: you pay for the trust and your family still pays for probate. If you invest in a trust, budget the time and attention to fund it, or use simpler tools where they fit.
Lower-Cost Tools That Still Work in Florida
Not every plan needs a trust. A Lady Bird deed can pass your homestead outside probate at modest cost. Payable-on-death and transfer-on-death designations move accounts directly to beneficiaries. For smaller or older estates, summary administration is faster and cheaper than formal administration. Matching the tool to the estate keeps costs proportional.
How to Get a Fair Price
Ask for a flat fee, a written scope, and whether funding a trust is included or billed separately. Ask how the plan avoids or reduces probate. A transparent quote tied to clear deliverables tells you more than the headline number.
Estate planning costs vary with your assets and goals, and the cheapest document is not the cheapest outcome. Consult a licensed Florida estate planning attorney for a clear quote and a plan sized to your situation.
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