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Home→Forms→Pour-Over Will→Wisconsin

Wisconsin Estate Planning Resources

In-depth guides covering Wisconsin probate laws, trust requirements, and estate planning strategies.

Free Wisconsin Pour-Over Will

Free Wisconsin pour-over will form. Directs assets into your trust at death, avoiding probate. 2 witnesses required. PDF download.

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Your Information

Enter your information to identify yourself as the testator (person making the will).

FREE & PRIVATE: This form is free—no account or credit card required. Your form entries and generated document never leave your browser—SimplyTrust does not transmit or store them. You are responsible for saving your completed document.

SELF-HELP SERVICE: SimplyTrust provides a self-help document preparation service. We are not a law firm and cannot provide legal advice, select forms for you, or tell you how to complete forms. Our role is limited to providing a platform where you input your own information into document templates.

NOT LEGAL ADVICE:This document was created entirely based on your selections. SimplyTrust does not review, analyze, or verify your entries, nor do we verify your identity, capacity, or authority to act. You are solely responsible for determining whether this document meets your needs and for completing all required execution formalities (signatures, witnesses, notarization, or recording) in accordance with your state's laws. For any legal questions, consult a licensed attorney in your state.

Frequently Asked Questions About Wisconsin Pour-Over Wills

A pour-over will directs any assets not already in your revocable living trust to transfer into the trust at death. It catches property you forgot to retitle, assets acquired after the trust was created, and personal belongings. In Wisconsin, these pour-over assets go through probate before reaching the trust — but they still follow the trust's distribution plan rather than state intestacy law.

No — assets transferred through a pour-over will go through Wisconsin probate, which typically takes 6-9 months. Assets already titled in the trust at death bypass probate entirely. If the pour-over assets total less than $50,000, Wisconsin's simplified procedure may apply — a faster path. Use the probate need checker to see what may require probate.

A pour-over will follows the same execution requirements as any Wisconsin will: 2 adult witnesses present at signing.Wis. Stat. § 853.03Verified May 27, 2026 A notary is optional for validity, but our form includes a self-proving affidavit that simplifies probate.

This form includes fields for alternate beneficiaries. If the trust doesn't exist, has been revoked, or is found invalid at death, assets go to your named alternates instead of Wisconsin intestacy distribution. This is an important safeguard — it ensures your assets have a destination regardless of what happens to the trust.

Trust assets can be distributed after Wisconsin's 4-month creditor notification period, without court involvement.Wis. Stat. § 701.0101 et seq.Verified May 27, 2026 Pour-over assets go through probate, which typically takes 6-9 months. Funding your trust during your lifetime saves your family time, cost, and privacy.

Yes. You can create a new pour-over will at any time — a new will revokes prior versions when it includes revocation language (our form includes this). Any new version must meet Wisconsin's execution requirements: 2 witnesses. Most families update their pour-over will whenever they update their trust.

Yes. A pour-over will only directs assets into a trust you've already created — without one, it's just a regular will. If you don't have a trust yet, you can set one up and pair it with this pour-over will as a safety net.

What Is a Pour-Over Will?

A pour-over will directs assets not titled in a trust to transfer into the trust at death. This includes property acquired after the trust was created, accounts that were never retitled, and personal belongings.

Trust assets transfer privately after Wisconsin's 4 monthsWis. Stat. § 701.0101 et seq.Verified May 27, 2026 creditor window. Pour-over assets go through probate first. Assets with no designation and no pour-over will pass under Wisconsin intestacy law.

In Wisconsin, your pour-over will needs 2Wis. Stat. § 853.03Verified May 27, 2026 witnesses to be valid. Our form includes a self-proving affidavit to help speed up the probate process for any assets that do pour over.

Guardian nominations for minor children can be included in a pour-over will. It takes 5-10 minutes.

SimplyTrustSimplyTrust Editorial·Updated May 27, 2026

Legal Sources

  • Wis. Stat. § 701.0101 et seq.
  • Wis. Stat. § 853.03

Data sourced from Wisconsin statutes and official state code. How we research.

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