What Does Estate Planning Cost in Florida?
Compare estate planning costs across providers in Florida. See how life events affect your total cost.
Frequently Asked Questions
Estate planning costs in Florida vary by provider. Online services range from $30-$600 upfront plus ongoing fees. Attorneys in Florida charge around $432/hour for trusts, putting attorney-prepared trust costs between $4,320 and $6,480 for an individual plan.
Major life events like marriage, divorce, or having a child often require updating your estate plan. Some providers require purchasing an entirely new plan, while others offer amendments. Attorney amendments in Florida typically cost $1,728 to $3,456 for major changes.
Online services have lower upfront costs ($30-$600) compared to attorneys in Florida (around $432/hour for trusts). However, total lifetime cost depends on subscription fees, amendment charges, and how often life events require updates. This calculator compares the full cost across providers.
Many online estate planning services charge annual subscription fees ranging from $0 to $240/year. These subscriptions may include document access, minor amendments, or attorney consultations depending on the provider and tier.
Trusts cost more upfront than wills but can save money long-term by avoiding probate. In Florida, an attorney-prepared trust typically costs $4,320 to $6,480, while a will costs $1,320 to $2,640. Wills require probate, which adds about $33,095 in costs for heirs on a $500,000 estate. See a detailed breakdown with the Florida trust cost calculator.
Probate on a $500,000 estate in Florida costs about $33,095 — roughly 7% of estate value — including attorney fees, executor fees, court costs, and publication costs.Fla. Stat. § 733.402 (bond — required by default: "Unless the bond requirement has been waived by the will or by the court, every fiduciary to whom letters are granted shall execute and file a bond with surety"; banks/trust companies exempt under (3)), § 733.617(2) (PR commission presumed reasonable: 3% first $1M, 2.5% $1M-$5M, 2% $5M-$10M, 1.5% above $10M), § 733.6171(3) (attorney compensation presumed reasonable: $1,500 for estates $40,000 or less; +$750 $40K-$70K; +$750 $70K-$100K; "3 percent on the next $900,000"; 2.5% $1M-$3M; 2% $3M-$5M; 1.5% $5M-$10M; 1% above $10M; written disclosure of negotiability required by (2)(b)), § 733.604(1)(a) (PR self-values the estate in a verified inventory — no court appraiser), § 733.702(1) (creditor claims: later of 3 months from first publication OR 30 days from service on the creditor), § 733.710(1) (absolute 2-year nonclaim bar from date of death), § 733.2121(2) (publication "once a week for 2 consecutive weeks, in a newspaper published in the county where the estate is administered"), § 735.201(2) (summary administration: estate less exempt property "does not exceed $150,000 ... or ... the decedent has been dead for more than 2 years" — $150,000 per Ch. 2026-57 § 7, in force since 2026-07-01), § 735.301(1) (disposition without administration: decedent "leaving only personal property" whose nonexempt value does not exceed preferred funeral expenses + last-60-days medical/hospital expenses; no fixed dollar cap; not amended by Ch. 2026-57). Re-verified 2026-07-14 by live fetch of the Ch. 733 and Ch. 735 statute pages on leg.state.fl.us and the enrolled chapter law Ch. 2026-57 at laws.flrules.org/2026/57 (act § 14: "This act shall take effect July 1, 2026"). Codified republication on leg.state.fl.us still printed the pre-2026 figures ($75,000 / $2,500 / $1,000 / $10,000) on 2026-07-14; the chapter law controls.Verified Jul 15, 2026 Estates with a trust can bypass probate entirely, potentially saving heirs thousands of dollars. Estimate probate fees with the Florida probate calculator.
Florida Estate Planning Resources
In-depth guides covering Florida probate laws, trust requirements, and estate planning strategies.




