A will is a legal document directing who receives your probate assets and who serves as executor after you die. In New York it must satisfy EPTL 3-2.1: signed at the end by the testator, witnessed by two witnesses within a 30-day window, with the testator declaring it to be their will. If a Manhattan resident dies without a valid will, EPTL 4-1.1 — not their wishes — decides who inherits.

New York will execution requirements (EPTL 3-2.1)

For a typed (attested) will to be valid in New York:

  • The testator must be at least 18 and of sound mind.
  • The will must be signed at the end by the testator (or by another at their direction, in their presence).
  • The testator must sign or acknowledge the signature in front of each witness.
  • There must be two attesting witnesses, who sign within 30 days of each other.
  • The testator must declare to the witnesses that the document is their will (publication).

Testator: the person who makes a will. A will signed by a testator who lacked capacity, or witnessed by only one person, is vulnerable to a contest in the New York County Surrogate’s Court.

What a will does not control

A will only governs probate assets — those in the decedent’s sole name with no beneficiary or survivorship designation. It does not override:

  • Jointly owned property with right of survivorship (passes to the co-owner)
  • Beneficiary-designation assets — life insurance, IRAs, 401(k)s, payable-on-death accounts
  • Assets in a trust (governed by the trust, not the will)

This matters enormously in Manhattan. If a co-op is held in a trust (EPTL 7-1.12) or jointly, the will is irrelevant to it. Coordinating beneficiary designations with the will prevents the classic mistake of an “I-left-everything-to-my-daughter” will that an ex-spouse beneficiary form quietly overrides.

What happens without a will in New York (EPTL 4-1.1)

If you die intestate (no will), EPTL 4-1.1 distributes your probate estate:

Survived by Who inherits
Spouse, no children Spouse takes everything
Spouse and children Spouse gets first $50,000 + half the balance; children split the rest
Children, no spouse Children take everything, equally
No spouse or children Parents; then siblings; then more distant kin
No relatives at all Estate escheats to New York State

Intestate: dying without a valid will. The state’s default plan applies — which rarely matches what a Manhattan resident with a co-op, a partner, or blended family would have chosen.

Holographic and nuncupative wills (EPTL 3-2.2)

New York recognizes handwritten (holographic) and oral (nuncupative) wills only in very narrow cases — essentially members of the armed forces during armed conflict and mariners at sea — and they expire shortly after the qualifying service ends. For practically every Manhattan resident, only a properly executed EPTL 3-2.1 will is reliable.

Self-proving affidavit

A self-proving affidavit is a sworn statement by the witnesses, signed before a notary at execution, attesting that the formalities were met. It lets the New York County Surrogate’s Court admit the will without locating the witnesses years later — a real convenience when witnesses have moved or died. It does not change the will’s terms; it speeds probate.

Updating and revoking a will (EPTL 3-4.1)

You can revise a will by a codicil (a witnessed amendment) or, better for clarity, a new will that revokes the prior one. Under EPTL 3-4.1, a will is revoked by a later will or by a physical act — burning, tearing, or canceling it with intent to revoke. Marriage, divorce, and new children can also alter how a will operates, so review it after major life events.

How a Manhattan will is probated

After death, the executor files the original will with the New York County Surrogate’s Court, 31 Chambers Street, under SCPA 1402. The court checks EPTL 3-2.1 compliance, notifies distributees, and — if valid — issues Letters Testamentary. Walk through it on the Manhattan probate process page.

FAQ

Is a handwritten will valid in New York? Only in narrow circumstances (active military, mariners at sea) under EPTL 3-2.2, and only temporarily. Otherwise it must meet EPTL 3-2.1.

How many witnesses does a New York will need? Two, who sign within 30 days of each other (EPTL 3-2.1).

Does a will avoid probate in Manhattan? No — a will must be probated. To keep your co-op out of court, use a funded trust (EPTL 7-1.12). See trusts.

Put a valid plan in place

Book a 30-minute consult with Russel Morgan to draft or review your New York will: calendly.com/russel-morgan/30min.

Have a question about your estate?

Talk it through with Russel Morgan — free 30-minute consult.

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