Home Legal Projects Florida Draft a Last Will and Testament in Florida | 3 Proposals

How a Consumer Hired a Lawyer to Draft a Last Will and Testament in Florida

See real project results from ContractsCounsel's legal marketplace — this project was posted by a consumer in Florida seeking help to draft a Last Will and Testament. The client received 3 lawyer proposals with flat fee bids ranging from $350 to $1,100.

Service type
Draft
Document type
Last Will and Testament
Location
Florida
Client type
Personal
Client industry
-
Deadline
Over a week
Pricing Range
$350 - $1,100 (Flat fee)
Number of Bids
3 bids

How much does it cost to Draft a Last Will and Testament in Florida?

For this project, the client received 3 proposals from lawyers to draft a Last Will and Testament in Florida, with flat fee bids ranging from $350 to $1,100 on a flat fee. Pricing may vary based on the complexity of the legal terms, the type of service requested, and the required turnaround time.

Will

5.0

"Good work and timely responses to questions."

Drafting
Last Will and Testament
ContractsCounsel User

Project Description

In 2023, a personal client in Florida sought assistance with drafting a last will and testament for a married couple. The client’s primary goal was to establish clear directives for the distribution of their limited assets, specifically three properties, while ensuring that everything was left to each other during their lifetimes. Additionally, the client wanted precise instructions for asset distribution upon the passing of both individuals, as all bank accounts were joint holders and no life insurance was in place. As a result, the client received three proposals from licensed lawyers, with flat fee bids ranging from $350 to $1,100, all submitted to complete the necessary documentation within the requested deadline of over a week.

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Lawyers that Bid on this Last Will and Testament Project

Managing Attorney

(10)

16 years practicing

Free consultation

Last Will and Testament
Get Free Proposal
$350/h

Managing Partner

(6)

5 years practicing

Free consultation

Last Will and Testament
Get Free Proposal
$400/h

Attorney

(8)

5 years practicing

Free consultation

Last Will and Testament
Get Free Proposal
$300/h

Other Lawyers that Help with Florida Projects

Attorney

(63)

17 years practicing

Free consultation

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$75/h

Attorney at Law

(21)

10 years practicing

Free consultation

Business Issue
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$300/h

Attorney

(66)

28 years practicing

Free consultation

Get Free Proposal
$400/h

Managing Attorney

(1)

17 years practicing

Free consultation

Get Free Proposal
$350/h

Other Lawyers that Help with Last Will and Testament Projects

Attorney

(7)

5 years practicing

Free consultation

Last Will and Testament
Get Free Proposal
$200/h

Attorney/Owner

(1)

16 years practicing

Free consultation

Last Will and Testament
Get Free Proposal
$350/h

Managing Partner

(1)

18 years practicing

Free consultation

Last Will and Testament
Get Free Proposal
$540/h

Attorney

(1)

25 years practicing

Free consultation

Last Will and Testament
Get Free Proposal
$400/h

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Forum Questions About Last Will and Testament

Last Will and Testament

Georgia

Asked on Jun 2, 2026

I had an Alabama elder care lawyer create my POA, will, etc. Now I am living permanently in Ga. Is my paperwork still good or do I need to get it reviewed and updated in Ga.

widowed and living alone

Allen L.

Answered Jun 5, 2026

The short answer is: your Alabama documents are most likely still legally valid in Georgia, but a Georgia attorney review is strongly recommended — especially given your situation living alone and widowed. Here is the breakdown: Will Georgia recognizes a will validly executed in another state as long as it was properly signed and witnessed under that state's law at the time it was made. Alabama and Georgia both require two witnesses, so your will should be fine. That said, if your Alabama will names your spouse or references Alabama-specific assets, accounts, or property that has since changed, it absolutely needs updating for that reason alone. Power of Attorney Georgia adopted the Uniform Power of Attorney Act in 2017. Georgia will generally honor a POA validly created in another state. However, Georgia has specific statutory language that banks, hospitals, and other institutions are accustomed to seeing. If your Alabama POA does not track Georgia's statutory form, some institutions may resist honoring it or ask for additional paperwork, which can cause serious delays in a crisis. Having a Georgia-compliant POA dramatically reduces that friction. Healthcare Directive / Advance Directive This is the most important one to update. Georgia has its own Advance Directive for Health Care form that combines a living will and healthcare proxy. Georgia medical providers are trained on this specific form. An Alabama healthcare directive may be legally valid here, but you may encounter real-world resistance from hospitals and doctors who are not familiar with it. A Georgia-specific advance directive is highly advisable. Practical Concerns Given Your Situation Living alone and widowed means your agent under your POA and your healthcare proxy are your first and only lines of protection if something happens. You want zero friction when those documents need to be used. This is not the situation to test whether an out-of-state document will be accepted in a moment of urgency. You should also confirm that whoever you have named as your agent, executor, and healthcare proxy is still the right person, still willing, and still able to serve. Bottom Line Your documents are not void, but getting them reviewed and updated for Georgia is genuinely worth the time and cost. At a minimum, a new Georgia Advance Directive for Health Care and a Georgia-compliant Durable POA should be strongly considered. While you are at it, confirm your beneficiary designations on any life insurance, IRAs, and bank accounts, as those pass outside your will regardless. Next Step The easiest way to get this handled is to open a project on ContractsCounsel at www.contractscounsel.com. You can post your document review and drafting project there, receive competitive flat-fee bids from Georgia-licensed attorneys who handle exactly this type of elder law work, and get everything updated without having to search for a lawyer on your own. It is a straightforward process and puts you in control of the cost upfront. Given your situation, this is one of those things that is well worth getting done sooner rather than later.

Read 1 attorney answer>

Last Will and Testament

Georgia

Asked on Jun 2, 2026

I had an Alabama elder care lawyer create my POA, will, etc. Now I am living permanently in Ga. Is my paperwork still good or do I need to get it reviewed and updated in Ga.

widowed and living alone

Allen L.

Answered Jun 5, 2026

The short answer is: your Alabama documents are most likely still legally valid in Georgia, but a Georgia attorney review is strongly recommended — especially given your situation living alone and widowed. Here is the breakdown: Will Georgia recognizes a will validly executed in another state as long as it was properly signed and witnessed under that state's law at the time it was made. Alabama and Georgia both require two witnesses, so your will should be fine. That said, if your Alabama will names your spouse or references Alabama-specific assets, accounts, or property that has since changed, it absolutely needs updating for that reason alone. Power of Attorney Georgia adopted the Uniform Power of Attorney Act in 2017. Georgia will generally honor a POA validly created in another state. However, Georgia has specific statutory language that banks, hospitals, and other institutions are accustomed to seeing. If your Alabama POA does not track Georgia's statutory form, some institutions may resist honoring it or ask for additional paperwork, which can cause serious delays in a crisis. Having a Georgia-compliant POA dramatically reduces that friction. Healthcare Directive / Advance Directive This is the most important one to update. Georgia has its own Advance Directive for Health Care form that combines a living will and healthcare proxy. Georgia medical providers are trained on this specific form. An Alabama healthcare directive may be legally valid here, but you may encounter real-world resistance from hospitals and doctors who are not familiar with it. A Georgia-specific advance directive is highly advisable. Practical Concerns Given Your Situation Living alone and widowed means your agent under your POA and your healthcare proxy are your first and only lines of protection if something happens. You want zero friction when those documents need to be used. This is not the situation to test whether an out-of-state document will be accepted in a moment of urgency. You should also confirm that whoever you have named as your agent, executor, and healthcare proxy is still the right person, still willing, and still able to serve. Bottom Line Your documents are not void, but getting them reviewed and updated for Georgia is genuinely worth the time and cost. At a minimum, a new Georgia Advance Directive for Health Care and a Georgia-compliant Durable POA should be strongly considered. While you are at it, confirm your beneficiary designations on any life insurance, IRAs, and bank accounts, as those pass outside your will regardless. Next Step The easiest way to get this handled is to open a project on ContractsCounsel at www.contractscounsel.com. You can post your document review and drafting project there, receive competitive flat-fee bids from Georgia-licensed attorneys who handle exactly this type of elder law work, and get everything updated without having to search for a lawyer on your own. It is a straightforward process and puts you in control of the cost upfront. Given your situation, this is one of those things that is well worth getting done sooner rather than later.

Read 1 attorney answer>

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