Assessment of when a will is needed, which family structures require extra care, and how intentions should be documented clearly.
We advise private individuals who need clarity around wills, family situations, forced-heirship rules, and the formal steps required for a document to hold up when it matters.
Assessment of when a will is needed, which family structures require extra care, and how intentions should be documented clearly.
Structured review of spouses, cohabitants, children from prior relationships, forced-heirship limits, and how the estate may actually fall out.
Practical orientation on signing, witnesses, storage, and when lawyer review or more tailored advice becomes the better option.

A will must do more than reflect intent. Its structure, execution, and formal validity all matter if it is to hold when it is later relied on.
Family structure often drives the legal risk. Cohabitants, children from prior relationships, and blended families usually require clearer planning than people first expect.
Many people want greater freedom than the law allows by default. Forced-heirship limits and the real practical effect on each beneficiary need to be understood early.
A correctly drafted document has limited value if it cannot be found later or no longer fits the situation. Storage and future review are part of the legal planning, not an afterthought.
Digital guidance goes far in many situations, but some arrangements need more individual legal precision. That is especially true when there are larger assets or a higher risk of future conflict.
The platform is built to make a legally heavy topic easier to work through. It guides the user step by step, gathers decisions into one structured draft, and can be supplemented with optional add-ons when the matter becomes more complex.
As soon as you want the estate to be distributed differently from the default legal order, or when the family situation makes clarity particularly important.
No. A draft is a good working basis, but it still has to meet the legal formalities to become a valid will. Execution, witnesses, and handling remain central.
Yes, often. When the default inheritance rules do not reflect the relationship or the intended outcome, it becomes more important to express the plan clearly and in legally sustainable form.
When the family structure is more complex, larger assets are involved, or there is an obvious risk of future dispute. In those cases, precision matters more than speed.