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Estate Planning & Administration

Wills, trusts, probate, and inheritance tax in Bucks County

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I Need to Plan Ahead
Wills, trusts, powers of attorney, healthcare directives
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Someone Has Died
Probate, executor duties, inheritance tax, deadlines
The Core Documents
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Last Wills & Testaments in Pennsylvania
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The Truth About Trusts in Pennsylvania
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Powers of Attorney
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Healthcare Directives & Living Wills
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Beneficiary Designations: The Documents That Override Your Will
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Estate Planning for Blended Families
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Pennsylvania Inheritance Tax: Planning Implications
Trusts: When You Need More Than a Will

For asset protection, multi-state property, special needs, or complex family situations

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Irrevocable Trusts: Types, Uses & When They Matter
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Grantor Trusts & Act 64: PA Tax Changes for 2025
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Funding a Trust: Deed Transfers, Retitling & Common Mistakes
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Trusts as IRA Beneficiaries: Conduit vs. Accumulation
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Trust Administration After Death
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Named as Trustee? What You Need to Know
Deep Dives & Special Situations
Not sure where to start? Most estate plans take one meeting to design and one week to draft. Free consultations available.
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When Someone Dies: Probate & Administration
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What to Do When Someone Dies: Checklist
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Do I Need Probate?
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Step-by-Step: The Probate Process in Bucks County
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Executor Duties & Personal Liability
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Pennsylvania Inheritance Tax: Complete Guide
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Estate Deadline Calculator
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Required Filings & Deadlines in Bucks County
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First Complete Advertisement & Notice to Creditors
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REV-1500 Schedules: Inheritance Tax Return Guide
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Selling Inherited Property in Pennsylvania
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Collecting Assets Without Opening an Estate (20 Pa.C.S. Β§ 3101)
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Small Estate Petitions (20 Pa.C.S. Β§ 3102) & the Family Exemption
Estate & Trust Disputes

When things go wrong: will contests, executor removal, surcharge actions, and fiduciary litigation in Bucks County Orphans' Court

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Will Contests & Caveats in Bucks County
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Removal of Executors & Trustees
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Guardianship of Incapacitated Persons
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Trust Litigation in Orphans' Court
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Family Settlement Agreements
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Estate & Trust Accountings in Bucks County
Myths & Common Mistakes
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Common Myths & Misunderstandings
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More Myths That Cost Families Money
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AI-Generated Legal Documents: What They Get Wrong in Pennsylvania

Common Questions

What happens if I become incapacitated without a power of attorney?

Your family would need to petition the Bucks County Orphans' Court for a guardianship, a process that is expensive, time-consuming, public, and requires ongoing court oversight. A $300 power of attorney avoids a $5,000+ guardianship proceeding.

My financial advisor says I need a trust to avoid inheritance tax. Is that true?

No. A revocable living trust provides zero inheritance tax savings in Pennsylvania. The assets are taxed at exactly the same rates. This is one of the most common misconceptions I encounter, and it leads families to spend thousands on documents they don't need.

How long does probate take in Bucks County?

A straightforward estate typically takes 9 to 12 months from opening to final distribution. Complex estates involving real estate sales, tax disputes, will contests, or family disagreements can take significantly longer.

Do I always need to open an estate?

Not necessarily. If the only assets are small bank accounts (under $20,000 per institution), final paychecks (under $10,000), or small insurance policies payable to the estate (under $11,000), family members may be able to collect these directly under 20 Pa.C.S. Β§ 3101 without opening an estate at all. You'll need a death certificate and, for bank accounts, a receipted funeral bill. If the assets exceed these limits or include real estate in the decedent's sole name, you'll need either a small estate petition (Β§ 3102) or full probate.

How often should I update my estate plan?

Review every 3 to 5 years or after any major life event: marriage, divorce, birth of a child, death of a beneficiary, significant asset changes, or moving to a new state.

Do I really need a trust?

Probably not. In Pennsylvania, probate is relatively quick and inexpensive compared to states like California. A trust makes sense if you own property in multiple states, need special needs planning, or have specific privacy concerns. We'll give you an honest assessment, not a sales pitch.

Can I disinherit my spouse?

A surviving spouse has an elective share right to claim one-third of the estate regardless of the will (20 Pa.C.S. Β§ 2203). This can only be waived by a valid prenuptial or postnuptial agreement.

What does an executor get paid?

Reasonable compensation, typically 3 to 5% of the estate's value in Bucks County. There is no fixed statutory fee. Compensation must be approved by the court or consented to by all beneficiaries.

I got married after making my will: is that a problem?

Yes, potentially a serious one. Under 20 Pa.C.S. Β§ 2507(3), a surviving spouse who married the testator after the will was executed and isn't provided for in the will is entitled to the full intestate share, automatically, with no election required. That can be one-half or more of the estate. Update your will immediately after any marriage or remarriage.

What about disinheriting a child?

Yes, you can disinherit a child in Pennsylvania. Best practice is to mention them by name and expressly state they are to receive nothing. This prevents a challenge based on the argument you simply forgot to include them.

Do stepchildren inherit if there's no will?

No. Stepchildren receive nothing under Pennsylvania intestacy law unless they were legally adopted. It doesn't matter if you raised them from infancy. Only legally adopted children and biological children inherit under Β§ 2103. If you want stepchildren to inherit, you must name them in a will.

Do adopted children have the same inheritance rights as biological children?

Yes. Under 20 Pa.C.S. Β§ 2108, adopted children are treated identically to biological children for inheritance purposes. An adopted child inherits from (and through) the adoptive parents, and the adoptive parents inherit from the adopted child.

What about children born outside of marriage?

A child born outside of marriage inherits from the mother automatically. Inheritance from the father requires that paternity was established, either by acknowledgment, by holding the child out as his own, or by clear and convincing evidence. If paternity was established, the child inherits equally with all other children.

Do half-siblings share equally with full siblings?

Yes. Under Pennsylvania intestacy law, half-siblings inherit equally with full siblings. There is no distinction between half and full blood relatives in the intestacy statute.

What happens if my spouse and I die at the same time?

Under Pennsylvania's simultaneous death statute (20 Pa.C.S. Β§ 8501), if there's no sufficient evidence that the persons died otherwise than simultaneously, each person's property is distributed as if they survived the other. In practice, this means each spouse's estate is distributed to their own heirs as if the other spouse predeceased them. Many well-drafted wills include a survivorship clause requiring the beneficiary to survive the testator by 30 days.

My partner and I have been together 25 years but never married. Do they inherit anything?

Nothing. Zero. Pennsylvania does not recognize common law marriage entered into after January 1, 2005. Your partner has no inheritance rights under intestacy, no matter how long you've lived together, shared finances, or built a life. The only way to protect an unmarried partner is through a will, trust, or beneficiary designations. This is not optional if you are in an unmarried partnership.

Can a parent inherit from a child who dies without a will?

Yes. Under Β§ 2103, if the decedent had no spouse and no children, the parents inherit the entire estate. If the decedent had a spouse but no children, the parents share the estate with the spouse (spouse gets first $30,000 + 50%, parents get the remaining 50%).

What if all of my closest relatives have died? Does the state get my estate?

Escheat is extremely rare. Pennsylvania law traces inheritance through an extensive chain: spouse, children, parents, siblings, grandparents, aunts/uncles, first cousins, and beyond. Under Act 50 of 2025, even if no relatives can be found, the estate first passes to an endowed community fund in the decedent's municipality, school district, or county before the Commonwealth receives anything (§ 2103(a)(6)). A thorough heir search almost always locates someone long before this point.

Can probate be avoided?

Yes, through revocable trusts, joint ownership with rights of survivorship, POD/TOD designations, and beneficiary designations. But remember, avoiding probate does not avoid Pennsylvania inheritance tax.

What if someone contests the will?

Will contests must be filed within one year of probate via caveat. The matter is decided by the Orphans' Court judge after an evidentiary hearing.

Can I use the Levittown ROW office to probate a will?

Yes. The Bucks County Register of Wills satellite office at 7321 New Falls Road in Levittown handles probate filings, making the process more convenient for lower Bucks County residents.

What's the difference between an executor and an administrator?

An executor is named in the will. An administrator is appointed by the court when there is no will or the named executor cannot serve. Their duties are the same.

Can the executor sell the house before the estate is settled?

Yes, but the executor needs authority, either from the will itself or by court order. If the will gives the executor broad powers of sale, they can list and sell the property. If it doesn't, a petition to the Orphans' Court is required. Either way, the sale should be at fair market value, and the proceeds become part of the estate for distribution. The executor should get a date-of-death appraisal for inheritance tax purposes regardless.

What if the executor isn't doing their job?

Beneficiaries can petition the Orphans' Court for removal of the executor under 20 Pa.C.S. Β§ 3182. Grounds include failure to account, wasting assets, self-dealing, unreasonable delay, or failure to perform duties. The court can appoint a successor. Beneficiaries can also file a surcharge action seeking to hold the executor personally liable for losses caused by their misconduct.

Everything was in joint names or had beneficiary designations. Do I still need to probate?

If every asset passed by joint ownership, POD/TOD designation, or beneficiary designation, there may be nothing that requires probate administration. However, you may still need to probate the will to cut off creditor claims and establish a clear record, especially if the estate owes money. You'll also still need to file a Pennsylvania Inheritance Tax Return (REV-1500). Joint assets and beneficiary-designated assets are still subject to inheritance tax even though they skip probate.

I used an online tool to create my will. Is it valid?

It might be legally valid if it meets the basic requirements (in writing, signed at the end, 18+, sound mind). But 'valid' and 'effective' are different things. I routinely see AI-generated wills that are missing the self-proving affidavit the Bucks County ROW requires, that ignore PA inheritance tax entirely, that use generic POA language banks reject, or that create trust structures that trigger unnecessary tax liability. If you've already created documents with an AI tool, bring them in, a review and revision is significantly cheaper than starting from scratch, and far cheaper than the problems a defective document creates later.

The executor died in the middle of probate. Does the whole process start over?

No. The Register issues Letters D.B.N. (de bonis non, meaning 'of goods not administered'). The new administrator picks up where the prior executor left off and administers only the remaining unadministered assets. The critical first step is accounting for what happened under the prior executor's watch. If the prior executor's estate is also open, coordinating the two administrations requires careful attention.

There's a will contest and nobody can get letters. What happens to the house and bills?

The Orphans' Court can appoint a pendente lite administrator, a temporary fiduciary who preserves the estate while the dispute is litigated. They can pay necessary expenses like property taxes, insurance, and utilities, but generally cannot sell assets or make distributions without specific court authority. The appointment ends when the contest is resolved and permanent letters issue.

Marc R. Lynde, Esq. Β· 12+ years as a licensed attorney Β· Cardozo School of Law Β· Licensed in PA & NY Β· Full bio β†’

Serving Bucks County Communities

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Bristol, PA
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Yardley, PA
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Morrisville, PA
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