Find out more about the specific laws that affect last wills in Wisconsin, how to get a last will, how to change a last will, what you can leave to your heirs through a last will, and more.
Find out more about Last Wills
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by Michelle Kaminsky, Esq.
Freelance writer and editor Michelle Kaminsky, Esq. has been working with LegalZoom since 2004. She earned a Jur...
Updated on: December 1, 2023 · 3min read
A last will and testament is an important step in planning the distribution of your estate (real and personal property) upon your death. Wisconsin wills permit the testator, the person writing the will, to provide for a spouse, children, other loved ones, and pets after his death as well as to name a personal representative for the estate.
Not to be confused with a will, a Wisconsin living will provides instructions should you become incapacitated and incapable of making decisions regarding your medical care.
Although a last will and testament are not legally required, without a will, state laws (called laws of intestacy) will determine the distribution of the deceased’s assets. The outcome may not coincide with the decedent's (the person who passed away) wishes, however, which means it is generally advisable to create a last will and testament.
In addition to providing the opportunity to direct asset distribution, a Wisconsin last will and testament also allows the testator to make a charitable gift, create a trust for any person, name a legal guardian for minor children, or create a “pet trust” in order to provide for the care of an animal after its owner’s death.
Before the terms of a will can be accepted, the will must be proven in probate court. Probate is the court-supervised process of distributing the estate of a deceased person.
Wisconsin offers formal, informal, and “special” probate. Formal probate requires court monitoring, while informal may not. Special probate generally involves small estates and includes an affidavit procedure that may be used for estates valued at no more than $50,000.
Someone who dies without a will is called “intestate,” which invokes the strict laws of intestacy. In Wisconsin, in the absence of a will, a surviving spouse inherits the entire estate even when the surviving spouse and decedent share descendants. If a decedent has at least one child who is not also a descendant of the surviving spouse, the spouse’s share is one-half of the decedent’s separate property; the children inherit the decedent’s community property share as well as the rest of the separate property.
If there is no surviving spouse, descendants, or parents, other relatives, including siblings and grandparents, will inherit depending on the closeness of the relation.
Not all property can be distributed according to a will. Some exceptions include the following:
The basic requirements for a Wisconsin last will and testament include the following:
A Wisconsin will may be changed at any time by codicil, an amendment, which must be executed in the same way as a will.
The revocation of a Wisconsin will can be accomplished by executing a subsequent will or by “burning, tearing, canceling, obliterating or destroying” the document or any part of it, done by either the testator or by someone else at his direction in his conscious presence with the intent to revoke.
If you are ready to create a last will of your own, LegalZoom can help you get started in three easy steps. LegalZoom also offers other legal products to help you prepare for the future, such as a living will and power of attorney.
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