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Your Trusted Rhode Island Wills Lawyers


"You don’t need a 200-page binder to protect the people you love. You need a clear, well-built will and a team that handles the details. We’ll make it straightforward."

Rhode Island Last Will and Testament Lawyer

Most families don’t want a lecture on legal theory. They want peace of mind—someone they trust in charge, kids protected, and a calm plan for the hardest day. That’s what a well-built will does when it’s drafted and signed correctly: it names the decision-makers, gives clear instructions, and leaves your family with a playbook they can actually follow.

Our Will Package is designed for real life. We listen first, translate your wishes into plain-English documents, and handle the formalities so your plan works when it’s needed - not just when it’s signed.

What a will actually accomplishes
Your will appoints the person who will steer the process, choose guardians for minor children, and spell out how property should be handled. It answers the small questions that cause big fights—who manages the house, how to treat keepsakes and heirlooms, what to do if a child isn’t yet ready to manage money—and it gives the Probate Court clear directions so your personal representative isn’t left guessing. Because life doesn’t pause for paperwork, we pair the will with the documents that matter during your lifetime: a durable financial power of attorney,  and a health-care power of attorney with HIPAA authorization and advance directives. Those let the right person act during an emergency so bills get paid, doctors speak to the right people, and decisions don’t stall.

We keep the experience human and predictable. One focused design meeting captures your people, your priorities, and your “what-ifs.” Drafts arrive with short summaries so you can read quickly and react confidently. We supervise the signing with the required formalities so the documents are unquestionably valid, then deliver a clean, indexed set with secure PDFs you’ll actually keep. In the weeks that follow, we help you fine-tune beneficiary forms and account titles so the plan on paper matches how your assets move in the real world.

A candid word about probate
A will is powerful, but it does not avoid probate. In both Rhode Island and Massachusetts, a will is your set of instructions for the Probate Court. Plenty of estates move through that process cleanly, and some families prefer the structure of court oversight. Still, probate is public, it has steps and timelines, and it adds cost and delay. If you want to keep details private, simplify transfers, or spare a surviving spouse from months of court checkpoints, a Revocable Trust often serves better. We’ll show you the differences and recommend the lightest option that achieves your goals; we won’t sell you a will if a trust would clearly make your life easier. If you’re unsure which lane fits, ask us about our Revocable Trust Package before you decide.

When a Will Package makes sense
A will-based plan works well for families who want a straightforward, affordable approach and are comfortable with a court-guided checklist when the time comes. If your assets are fairly simple—retirement accounts, a primary residence, life insurance—and your beneficiaries can receive funds outright or with simple age-based guardrails, this package is a clean solution. It is also a critical on-ramp for young parents who need guardianship nominations now and don’t feel ready for the added structure of a trust.

When a trust is the smarter choice
If you own property in more than one state, value privacy, expect friction among beneficiaries, or want more control over timing and conditions, a revocable trust usually saves time, reduces stress, and prevents avoidable costs later. Many families begin the conversation believing they “just need a will” and feel relieved once they see how a trust changes the experience for the people they love. We’ll lay out the trade-offs in plain English and help you choose without pressure.

What’s included when we Draft Your Will
Your Will Package includes a tailor-made Last Will & Testament, with optional testamentary trusts for minors or young adults so an inheritance isn’t dropped in a teenager’s lap all at once. We draft the financial power of attorney and health-care documents so the person you trust can act during a crisis, add a HIPAA release to unlock medical information when it matters, and document your wishes around end-of-life care. We include a simple memorandum you can update for personal items and practical guidance for digital access so your personal representative isn’t locked out of essential accounts. Execution matters, so we run a proper signing with witnesses and a notary, then deliver an organized set and a short “after-care” list: where to store originals, who should know about them, and which beneficiary forms to update.

Fees and timeline (no surprises)
Planning with our firm starts at $2,500 for an individual or a couple. That fee covers design, drafting, signing ceremony, and a follow-up to finish any beneficiary or titling adjustments. If your situation calls for special-needs provisions, multiple testamentary trusts, business-succession language, or a true rush, we’ll flag that up front and set a fixed fee before work begins. Most plans finalize within two to three weeks from the design meeting; your schedule and responsiveness drive the pace more than anything else.

What happens when someone passes
When death occurs, your personal representative uses the will to open probate, safeguard property, notify heirs and beneficiaries, pay proper debts and taxes, and then distribute according to your instructions. Because we build “probate-readiness” into the Will Package—organized information, documented wishes, and clear nominations—the process is calmer and faster. If the estate includes a home, we also advise on a small but crucial sequencing rule: keep the estate open and your appointment active until the sale proceeds are actually deposited into the estate account. Closing the estate too early can cause a bank to refuse the deposit and a buyer’s title attorney to question authority. It’s the kind of practical guidance that keeps things moving and avoids rework.


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Answers to questions you may be asking?

Can we protect a child who shouldn’t receive money all at once?
Yes. Your will can stage distributions at ages you choose, with a trustee using funds for health, education, and real needs along the way. If you want even finer control—or you want to keep the process private—a revocable trust or special needs trust handles this more gracefully.
Does a will work for blended families?
It can, but court process plus step-family dynamics can be a rough mix. If you want to protect a surviving spouse while preserving inheritances for children from a prior relationship, a revocable trust typically gives cleaner, enforceable mechanics.
What about special-needs planning?
We can build a testamentary special-needs trust into your will so benefits are preserved. If special-needs planning is central to your goals, a standalone trust usually offers better day-to-day administration; we’ll show you both paths.
Can I just sign something at home?
State formalities are strict. A will that fails on execution is worse than none at all. We supervise signing so your documents are defensible when it counts.
How often should I update?
Check in every two to three years or after major life events—marriage, divorce, birth or adoption, buying or selling a home, moving states—to keep the plan aligned with reality.

How it feels to work with us
​From the first call, the process is calm and organized. We map your goals, translate them into documents you understand, and handle the formalities so there’s nothing to worry about on signing day. Afterward, we don’t disappear; we help you finish any beneficiary updates and remain available when questions come up. If, during our work together, it becomes clear that a Revocable Trust would serve you better, we’ll say so and explain why. The goal is not to sell paper; it’s to protect the people you love.

If you’re ready to stop putting this off, start with a short conversation. Tell us what you want to protect, who you trust, and what “simple” means to you. We’ll confirm whether a Will Package is the right lane - or whether moving to our Revocable Trust Package would truly make life easier for your family - and give you a clear, predictable path to finished.

Guiding Families. Protecting Legacies. Building Peace of Mind.

Fabisch Law, L.L.C.
401-324-9344

Rhode Island Main Office
2 Dexter St.
Pawtucket, Rhode Island 02860

East Bay, Rhode Island Office
555 Metacom Avenue
Bristol, Rhode Island


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Disclaimer: The Rhode Island Supreme Court licenses all lawyers in the general practice of law, but does not license or certify any lawyer as an expert or specialist in any field of practice. This web site is designed for general information only. The information presented at this site should not be construed to be formal legal advice, nor the formation of a lawyer client relationship.

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Also Serving: Warwick, Cranston, East Greenwich, North Kingstown, South Kingston,  Smithfield, Lincoln, Narragansett, Middletown, Barrington, Portsmouth, Newport, and Westerly.
  • About
    • Staff
    • Firm News
  • Practice Areas
    • Personal Injury >
      • Rhode Island Auto Accident Attorney
      • Rhode Island Trucking Accident Attorney
      • Rhode Island Slip and Fall Attorney
      • Rhode Island Dog Bite Attorney
      • Rhode Island Medical Malpractice Attorney
      • Rhode Island and Massachusetts Wrongful Death Lawyer
    • Elder Law and Estate Planning >
      • Rhode Island Will Lawyer
      • Rhode Island Revocable Living Trust Lawyer
      • Advanced Estate Planning
      • Rhode Island Probate Lawyer and Estate Administration Attorney
      • Special Needs Trust Lawyer
      • Rhode Island Guardianship Lawyer
  • Articles
    • Probate and Estate Planning Blog
    • The Essential Guide to Estate Planning for Young Families | Fabisch Law
    • The Essential Guide to Retirement, Long-Term Care, and Estate Planning for Seniors
    • The Essential Guide to Medicaid Asset Protection & Nursing-Home Planning
    • The Essential Guide to Special Needs Trusts & Guardianship
  • Other Professionals
  • Schedule an Appointment
  • Pay My Bill