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In Texas, a will controls what happens after your death through the probate process, while a trust can manage assets during your lifetime and continue operating after you pass away. A will and a trust both allow you to direct how your property is handled, but they work in fundamentally different ways.
A will outlines how your property should be distributed after you pass away, names guardians for minor children, and appoints someone to administer your estate. Under Texas law, a valid will must be either handwritten entirely in the testator’s own handwriting and signed, or signed in front of two credible witnesses who sign in the testator’s presence. A will can also be made self-proved by attaching a notarized self-proving affidavit under Texas Estates Code § 251.104, which allows the will to be admitted to probate without the witnesses having to testify in court.
After your death, the will is submitted to the probate court. Texas allows independent administration under Texas Estates Code Chapter 401, which permits an executor to settle the estate with minimal court supervision, making Texas probate considerably less burdensome than in most other states. The process still becomes part of the public record, but independent administration significantly reduces the burden on your family.
A trust is a legal arrangement in which you place assets under the management of a trustee, who administers them according to your written instructions for the benefit of your named beneficiaries. Unlike a will, a trust does not require court involvement to distribute assets after your death, which means the transfer happens privately and without the delays that even a streamlined probate process involves.
A revocable living trust takes effect during your lifetime, allowing you to maintain control as your own trustee while providing continuity if you become incapacitated. It can also specify exactly how and when assets are distributed, which is useful when you want to provide for a minor child over time or manage assets for a beneficiary who may not be equipped to handle a lump sum.
Some of the major differences between wills and trusts include:
A will is the foundation of most estate plans. It can sometimes be sufficient on its own when your estate is relatively straightforward, and your primary goal is directing the distribution of property and naming guardians for minor children. Texas’s independent administration probate option reduces one of the most common arguments for choosing a trust, as many people form trusts to avoid probate. For families earlier in their wealth-building years or without complex assets, a well-drafted will often provides exactly the protection they need.
Forming a trust makes sense when:
Blended families, beneficiaries with special needs, and situations where you want to delay or condition distributions are all scenarios where a trust’s flexibility is difficult to replicate with a will alone. A trust also provides incapacity planning that a will cannot.
Many Texas families use both tools together. A trust holds assets transferred into it, while a pour-over will catches any property left outside the trust at death and directs it accordingly. The will also handles guardianship designations for minor children, which a trust cannot do, while the trust provides privacy, incapacity coverage, and more detailed distribution instructions for larger assets. Together, these are two of the important legal tools in Texas estate planning.
What happens if you have neither? Without a will or a trust, Texas intestacy laws determine how your property is distributed, and the result may not reflect your wishes. The state divides assets according to a fixed formula based on family relationships, with no consideration for your personal circumstances, your relationships, or your intentions. For most families, that outcome is reason enough to have at least a basic will in place.
Owens Law Firm focuses exclusively on estate planning and probate. Attorney Paul Owens brings more than 20 years of experience to every client, along with 15 years as a hospital administrator, experience that gave him a firsthand view of what families face when a loved one becomes incapacitated or passes away. We serve clients in Helotes, Alamo Ranch, and throughout the San Antonio area.
Call (210) 695-5110 or contact us online to schedule your free consultation today.
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