If you searched for a trust and will attorney

Looking for a trust and will attorney in California? You might not need one.

Most California families searching for a trust and will attorney or lawyer don't actually need an attorney — they need someone to prepare the documents correctly. A registered Legal Document Assistant (LDA) prepares the same trust, will, and supporting documents for $950–$1,350, versus $2,500–$5,000+ at an attorney's office. Identical documents. Half to a third of the price.

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What you're actually looking for when you search "trust and will attorney"

Most people searching "trust and will attorney" or "trust and will lawyer" are looking for one of three things:

If you're in the first two categories — you know what document you want and you need it prepared correctly — an LDA does exactly that, for substantially less. If you're in the third category and want strategic advice about your specific tax or family situation, you may want to talk to a trust and will attorney. I'll explain how to tell which one you are below.

How much does a trust and will attorney charge in California?

California attorneys' standard rates for trust and will preparation, as of 2026:

Some attorneys offer flat fees; others bill hourly at $300–$600 per hour. Either way, you're paying for an attorney's overhead: bar dues, malpractice insurance for high-risk advisory work, firm overhead, and the legal-advice liability that comes with the bar license.

How much does an LDA charge for the same documents?

Terri Tutt LDA, registered in San Joaquin County, prepares the same documents at flat fees:

That's roughly half to a third of what an attorney charges — for documents that are equally valid under California law. See the full pricing list →

Same document. Half the cost. Why?

A properly prepared revocable living trust prepared by an LDA is legally identical to one prepared by an attorney. The price difference reflects what the attorney's hourly rate has to cover (advisory liability, bar dues, malpractice insurance) that an LDA doesn't carry. For uncontested, standardized document preparation — which is what most trust and will work actually is — that overhead isn't buying you a better document. It's just buying overhead.

When you actually do need a trust and will attorney

An LDA cannot legally do any of the following — and if your matter falls into any of these categories, you genuinely need an attorney:

If your matter is uncontested, your assets are within normal ranges (no estate tax exposure), and you've already decided what you want done, you don't need an attorney to draft and record the documents. You need someone who knows how to do it correctly. That's what an LDA does.

The most important question: will the trust actually work?

Both attorney-prepared and LDA-prepared trusts share the same vulnerability: a trust only avoids probate for assets it actually owns. If your house is never deeded into the trust, the trust doesn't keep it out of probate court. This is the single most common estate planning mistake in California, and it happens with attorney-prepared trusts as often as LDA-prepared ones.

When I prepare a living trust bundle, the deed that transfers your home into the trust is included — prepared, properly executed, and recorded with the County Recorder. With my 16 years of mortgage lending background and Simplifile eRecording approval, this funding step isn't an afterthought — it's the most important part of the work. Read more about trust funding →

What about a will-only setup?

Some families don't need a full trust — they just need a will. A standalone will from an attorney typically costs $300–$800. I prepare a standalone will for $125. The document is functionally identical and equally valid under California law.

One note: a will alone doesn't avoid probate. If you own real estate in California, an estate with a will (but no trust) still goes through probate court — typically 12–18 months and 4–8% of the gross estate's value in statutory fees. Read about California probate costs → If you own a house, you almost certainly want a trust, not just a will.

How to tell whether you need an attorney or an LDA

Honest test:

If you're not sure which category you're in, the initial conversation with me is free. I'll tell you straight — either I can handle it, or you need an attorney and I'll refer you to one I trust.

What a free initial conversation looks like

About 15–30 minutes by phone, video, or in person at my Stockton office. I'll ask what you're trying to accomplish, what you currently own, who your beneficiaries are, and whether anyone might contest your plan. Based on those answers, I'll tell you (1) whether your matter is something an LDA can prepare or whether you need an attorney, (2) which package or document fits your situation, and (3) exactly what it will cost. No hard sell. No retainer required. No charge for the conversation.

Why my LDA practice is different from most

If you're going to use an LDA instead of a trust and will attorney, it matters which LDA. A few things that distinguish my practice:

Common questions

Will an LDA-prepared trust be challenged in court if someone contests it?
A properly prepared, properly executed, properly notarized revocable living trust holds up the same way regardless of who prepared it. If contest is a real risk in your situation, that's a different question — that's a litigation question, and you need an attorney whether the trust was prepared by an attorney or an LDA. Hiring an attorney to draft a trust does not insulate it from challenge.
Can an LDA legally prepare a living trust in California?
Yes. California Business and Professions Code §6400 et seq. specifically authorizes registered LDAs to prepare legal documents (including trusts and wills) at the specific direction of consumers who already know what they want. The statute requires LDAs to register with the County Clerk, post a $25,000 surety bond, and meet experience/education requirements. I'm registered in San Joaquin County as LDA-110.
What if my trust needs to be changed later?
Trust Amendments cost $200 with me (vs. $500–$1,500 with an attorney). Common reasons to amend: beneficiary changes, successor trustee changes, healthcare agent updates, adding a newly born grandchild, removing a deceased beneficiary.
What if my situation turns out to be more complicated than I thought?
I'll tell you. If it's an attorney matter, I'll refer you to a California estate planning attorney I trust. I'd rather lose your business than mishandle it.
I'm in [city] — do you work outside of Stockton?
Yes. I'm registered in San Joaquin County and based in Stockton, but I serve clients throughout California. Most appointments are at my Stockton office; phone and video consultations are also available. With Simplifile eRecording, I can record deeds in most California counties electronically.

Ready to start?

The initial conversation is free. If your matter is something I can prepare, I'll quote a flat fee and we'll get started. If it's something that actually needs a trust and will attorney, I'll tell you so and refer you to one — at no charge for the conversation.

Same documents. Half the cost. No surprises.

Free initial consultation. Phone, email, or in-person at the Stockton office. Evenings and weekends accommodated when possible.

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