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Pour-Over Will Attorney Boca Raton | Trust Safety Net | Florida Wills & Trusts

Pour-Over Wills in Florida

A pour-over will catches what your trust misses. It's the safety net that ensures all your assets—even those you forgot to transfer—ultimately follow your living trust's distribution plan.

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Pour-over will included with every trust we create.

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Your Trust's Safety Net

A living trust only controls assets that have been transferred into it. But what happens to assets you forgot to transfer, or assets you acquired shortly before passing away? Without a safety mechanism, those assets would pass by intestacy—Florida's default rules—potentially going to people you didn't intend or in proportions you didn't want.

That's where a pour-over will comes in. It's a special type of will that directs any assets in your name at death to "pour over" into your existing trust. Once there, those assets are distributed according to your trust's terms, along with everything else.

Think of it as a funnel: everything eventually flows into your trust, ensuring your entire estate follows one unified distribution plan.

The pour-over will works hand-in-hand with your living trust as an integrated system. The trust handles most of your assets and avoids probate for them. The pour-over will catches anything that slips through and makes sure it still reaches your intended beneficiaries.

Every trust-based estate plan we create includes a coordinated pour-over will. It's not an optional add-on—it's an essential component of complete trust-based planning.

Important Distinction

Assets passing through a pour-over will still go through probate. The will doesn't avoid probate—it ensures those assets ultimately follow your trust's plan.

Your Pour-Over Will Includes

  • Direction to pour assets to trust
  • Guardian nominations for minors
  • Personal representative designation
  • Self-proving affidavit
  • Coordination with trust terms

How a Pour-Over Will Works

The pour-over will directs untitled assets into your trust after probate.

Assets in Your Name

Bank accounts, vehicles, or property not in the trust

Pour-Over Will

Directs assets to trust after probate

Your Living Trust

All assets follow unified distribution plan

Why Not Just Put Everything in the Trust?

That's the goal—and we help you fund your trust properly from the start. But life happens. You might buy a new vacation home and forget to title it to the trust. You might receive an inheritance shortly before passing away. You might have assets you intentionally keep outside the trust for various reasons.

The pour-over will is your backup plan. It catches whatever the trust misses and ensures everything ultimately follows your intended distribution plan.

What a Pour-Over Will Catches

Common assets that might need to pass through the pour-over will.

Untitled Bank Accounts

Checking or savings accounts never transferred to the trust, or new accounts opened without trust titling.

New Vehicles

Cars, boats, or recreational vehicles purchased after the trust was created and not retitled to the trust.

Personal Property

Jewelry, art, collectibles, furniture, and other tangible items that can't be titled to a trust.

Inheritances

Money or property you inherit near end of life, before there's time to transfer it to the trust.

Tax Refunds & Settlements

Income tax refunds, legal settlements, or other payments received in your individual name.

Untransferred Real Estate

Property purchased after trust creation or never deeded to the trust due to oversight.

Pour-Over Will vs. Standard Will

Both are wills, but they serve different purposes.

Feature
Pour-Over Will
Standard Will
Directs assets to a trust
Unified distribution plan with trust
Can name guardians for minors
Requires probate
Works as trust backup system
Distribution details kept private

Common Questions About Pour-Over Wills

Answers to questions we hear most often from South Florida families.

A pour-over will is a special type of will designed to work with a living trust. Instead of distributing assets directly to beneficiaries, it directs that any assets in your name at death be "poured over" into your existing trust—where they're then distributed according to the trust's terms. It acts as a safety net for assets that weren't transferred to the trust during your lifetime.
No—and this is an important distinction. Assets that pass through a pour-over will still require probate. The will simply directs where those assets go after probate: into your trust. The goal is to ensure all your assets ultimately follow your trust's distribution plan, not to avoid probate for those particular assets.
A pour-over will catches assets you forgot to transfer to your trust, assets acquired shortly before death, or assets intentionally left outside the trust. It ensures everything ends up following your trust's distribution plan rather than passing by intestacy (Florida's default rules). It's a safety net—you hope you never need it, but you want it there.
Common examples include: a new car purchased shortly before death, a checking account never retitled to the trust, an inheritance received near end of life, personal property like jewelry or collectibles, tax refunds or legal settlements, and any real estate not transferred to the trust. Proper trust funding minimizes what passes through the pour-over will.
Yes. Like any will, a pour-over will can—and should—name guardians for minor children. This is actually one of the most important functions of any will, pour-over or otherwise. The trust handles asset distribution, but only a will can nominate guardians for the court to consider.
Yes. Every trust-based estate plan we create includes a coordinated pour-over will. The two documents work together as an integrated system—the trust handles most assets and avoids probate, while the pour-over will catches anything that slips through and ensures it follows your overall plan.

Complete Your Estate Plan

A pour-over will ensures nothing slips through the cracks. Combined with a properly funded trust, it provides comprehensive protection for your family.

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