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Personal information

Basic information about you

Email address

Where should we send your will draft?

Family and relatives

Information about your family

In Texas, if you have no spouse and no children, your parents can inherit under the state's intestacy rules. Naming your beneficiaries clearly in the will avoids relying on that default.

Assets and estate

Information about your assets

Estate distribution and final wishes

Naming beneficiaries, gifts and last wishes

In Texas you can generally leave your estate as you wish. Because Texas is a community property state, remember that your surviving spouse already owns one-half of the community estate, so your will controls your own half plus any separate property.

Without alternate beneficiaries, a gift may fail and pass under the Texas intestacy rules if a beneficiary dies before you.

A specific gift passes a particular item or amount to a named person, separately from the share of your residual estate.

You are free to leave someone out of your Texas will. This does not affect your spouse's one-half ownership of community property, which is theirs regardless of the will. Explaining your reasons clearly can help avoid a dispute.

The person you appoint to carry out the instructions in your will. In Texas this person is called the executor. Naming an independent executor generally keeps the process simpler and less costly.

Personal details

Details needed for the legal validity of your will

You sign the finished will with your full name at the end. Under Tex. Est. Code Sec. 251.052 a holographic will must be wholly in your own handwriting and signed by you. Texas requires no witnesses and no notary, and a date is not required, though adding one helps show it is your latest will.

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Frequently asked questions

Yes, provided you finish it the right way. Under Tex. Est. Code Sec. 251.051 and 251.052, a holographic will is valid when it is written wholly in your own handwriting and signed by you. No witnesses are required and no date is required. What we hand you is a clean, correctly structured draft. It becomes a legally valid holographic will the moment you copy the whole thing out by hand on paper and sign it yourself.

Because Texas recognizes two separate paths, and printing points you toward the harder one. A typed or printed will has to be signed in front of two credible witnesses to be valid. A holographic will skips the witnesses entirely, but only if it is written completely in your own handwriting. If you print our draft and sign it alone, it is neither a valid witnessed will nor a valid holographic will. Copying the full text by hand is what makes the witness-free route work, so the handwriting is not a formality, it is the whole point.

Texas gives you unusually wide freedom here. There is no forced heirship and no elective share, so you are not required to leave a fixed portion to your spouse or to your children, and you can disinherit an adult child if you choose. One thing you cannot give away, though, is property that is not fully yours. Texas is a community property state, which means your surviving spouse already owns one half of everything the two of you acquired during the marriage. Your will can only dispose of your own half of the community property plus your separate property, so name what is genuinely yours to give.

Keep the signed original somewhere safe and dry, and make sure the person you named as executor knows exactly where it is, because a copy is far weaker than the original if the will ever has to be probated. If you want extra security, the clerk of the county where you live can hold your will for safekeeping during your lifetime under Tex. Est. Code Sec. 252.001, whether you are in Houston, Dallas, Austin, San Antonio or anywhere else in the state. Texas has no statewide will registry, so there is no central database to file it in.

We strongly recommend against a single shared document. A holographic will has to be wholly in one person's handwriting, so two people physically cannot create one valid handwritten will together. Beyond that, joint wills tend to lock the survivor into terms that are painful to change after the first death. The clean solution is two separate mirror wills, one in each spouse's own handwriting, each signed by that spouse. You can make them say almost the same thing while keeping each one independently valid and freely revocable.

Yes, and it is easy. A Texas will has no expiration, but life does not stand still, so revisit it after a marriage, a divorce, a birth, a death or a move. The safest way to make a change is to handwrite and sign a brand new holographic will that revokes all previous wills, then destroy the old signed original so no stale version can surface later. Avoid scribbling edits in the margins of a finished will, since alterations can raise doubt about what you actually intended.

No, and we do not pretend it does. This service gives you a solid, well-organized draft for a straightforward estate, which covers a great many Texas families perfectly well. But if your situation is complex, for example a blended family, a business, property in more than one state, a beneficiary with special needs or a plan that involves a trust, you should have a Texas estate attorney review it. Think of this as a strong, affordable starting point, not as legal advice.

Why Texas Will Template is better than ChatGPT

Texas Will Template

  • Built around Texas succession law
  • Trained on professionally drafted wills
  • Guides you step by step through the process
  • A finished draft in 10 minutes
  • Guide to copying it out by hand
  • As PDF, Word and OpenOffice

ChatGPT

  • No legal specialization
  • Not trained on wills
  • No structured guidance
  • Lots of fixes needed
  • No handwriting guide
  • Text only

What our customers say

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Structured around Texas Estates Code rules for holographic wills

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Current Texas law

This is not legal advice. Texas Will Template is not a law firm and does not provide legal representation. What you receive is a self-help will draft to use as a starting point. To make it a valid Texas will you copy the draft out in your own handwriting and sign it yourself. If your estate is large or your situation is complicated, consider having a Texas attorney review your will before you rely on it.