Summary
Many people think having a will keeps their family out of probate, but that’s not how it works in Florida. A will must still go through probate—it simply provides instructions to the court. Without proper planning, families often face delays, costs, and stress during an already difficult time. Tools like trusts, beneficiary designations, and Lady Bird Deeds can help reduce or avoid probate, but only when coordinated correctly. A will is a starting point—not a complete strategy.

Most people think having a will means their family avoids probate.
That’s not how it works in Florida.
In fact, having a will alone often guarantees your estate goes through probate.
And for many families, that realization comes too late.
A will does not avoid probate in Florida.
It must be filed with the probate court and used as part of the probate process
No—A Will Does NOT Avoid Probate in Florida

Why This Confuses So Many People
Here’s the simplest way to understand it:
- A will = Last Wishes and instructions to the court
- Probate = the legal process that carries out those Wishes and instructions
If you don’t have a will, your estate still goes through probate (called intestate probate).
If you do have a will, your estate goes through probate (called testate probate).
👉 A will doesn’t avoid probate—it tells the court how to handle it.

The Real Problem with Probate in Florida
For some families, probate is manageable.
For others, it becomes a long, expensive, and stressful process.
Here’s what we typically see:
- Time: Often 6–12 months or longer
- Cost: Court fees, attorney’s fees, administrative expenses
- Loss of Privacy: Probate is a public process
- Stress: Families are left navigating legal procedures while grieving
And the hardest part?
Many people thought they had “handled everything” simply by creating a will.

What Actually Avoids Probate in Florida
If your goal is to keep your family out of court, a will alone is not the solution.
Proper planning may include:
- Revocable Living Trusts
- Carefully structured beneficiary designations
- Lady Bird Deeds (Enhanced Life Estate Deeds) – a powerful Florida-specific tool
- Joint ownership (used carefully and strategically)
👉 Proper planning—not just a will—is what keeps your family out of court.
⚠️ A Critical Warning About Beneficiary Designations
Many people are told that naming beneficiaries solves everything.
Sometimes it does.
Sometimes it creates a completely different problem.
In fact, federal law can override your beneficiary designation in ways most people never see coming—especially in second marriages or blended families.
If you want to understand how this can go wrong, read this:
👉 https://denise.law/second-marriage-estate-planning-trap-when-federal-law-overrides-your-beneficiary-designation/
This is exactly why coordination—not just documents—matters.

A Will Is a Starting Point—Not a Strategy
A will is an important document.
But it’s only one piece of a much larger plan.
Without coordination between your assets, titles, beneficiary designations, and legal documents, even a well-drafted will can fall short of your goals.
How We Approach Estate Planning Differently
At our firm, we help Florida families build plans that actually work—not just documents that look good on paper.
Because the goal isn’t just to have a will.
The goal is to make things easier for the people you care about.
Not Sure What Your Plan Actually Does?
Most people we meet already have documents.
They’re just not coordinated in a way that achieves what they think.
If you’re not sure whether your current plan avoids probate—or creates unintended consequences—we can review it with you.
No pressure. Just clarity.
If you’re not sure whether your current plan avoids probate—or creates unintended consequences—you can start by reviewing this Florida Estate Planning Checklist to see what may be missing:
👉 https://denise.law/florida-estate-planning-checklist-2026/
And if you’d like a more personalized review, we can walk through it with you.


