Vertical thumbnail for estate planning video. Dark navy to purple gradient background. Top red warning banner reads California Estate Planning Warning. Left side shows purple velvet curtain and empty gold microphone stand symbolizing celebrity. Center features large gold text reading Prince's $156 Million Mistake with a red strike-through. Bottom shows comparison: Without a Will shows 6 Years and $28K Fees in red, VS in gold, With a Trust shows 120 Days and $0 Fees in green. Bottom gold banner reads Don't Let This Be Your Family with buyatrust.com logo. No celebrity likeness depicted. Educational legal content about avoiding probate in California.

Prince died without a will. Six years later, his $156 million estate was still in court. His family paid $42 million in taxes and $6.2 million in legal fees before seeing a single dollar. The difference? A $3,500 trust would have avoided all of it. Don't let this be your family. Watch the full video (link in bio) to learn how to avoid probate in California. #EstatePlanning #Probate #Prince #LivingTrust #CaliforniaProbate


Learn how to avoid probate in California. Prince’s $156M estate disaster shows why San Diego homeowners need a living trust. Start at $800.

“Key Takeaways”

  • How to avoid probate in California: Create a revocable living trust and transfer all assets into it. No trust = probate. Probate = 9-18 months + 4-7% in fees.
  • Prince’s $156M estate triggered $1.57M in statutory attorney fees under California Probate Code § 10800. A trust would have avoided all court involvement.
  • San Diego probate backlog: 9-12 months for uncontested cases. Trust administration takes as little as 120 days (mandatory notice period under Probate Code § 16061.7).
  • 2026 California small estate limit: Estates under $184,500 may avoid formal probate. Median San Diego home: $850,000+. You need a trust.
  • buyatrust.com delivers a fully funded, recorded trust starting at $2,500. Compare to $28,000 in probate fees on a $1.5M San Diego home.

Full Pillar Page

Quick Answer: How do I avoid probate in California?

Create a revocable living trust and transfer ownership of your home, bank accounts, and investments into the trust’s name. When you die, your successor trustee distributes assets directly to your heirs without any court involvement. No probate. No delays. No public records. At buyatrust.com, we handle the entire process for $2,500-$4,000.

What Happens If You Die Without a Will in California? (The Prince Example)

Quick Answer: Under California Probate Code § 6400-6455, the state decides exactly who inherits your assets. Your unmarried partner receives nothing. Your estranged relative you haven’t spoken to in 20 years gets a share. The court appoints an administrator. Your family waits 9-18 months.

Prince died on April 21, 2016, without a will or trust. He was not a California resident, but the legal principles are identical. Minnesota intestacy law dictated his heirs. The court appointed a special administrator. Six years later, after $42 million in federal estate taxes and $6.2 million in legal fees, his heirs finally received their shares.

For a San Diego homeowner, dying without a will means California Probate Code § 6402 controls your distribution:

  • Surviving spouse receives all community property and a portion of separate property
  • Children divide the remainder equally
  • No spouse or children? Parents inherit
  • No parents? Siblings inherit
  • No siblings? Extended family inherits

At buyatrust.com, we see this tragedy regularly. A San Diego widower with two adult children and a live-in partner of 15 years dies without a will. Under § 6402, the two children split 100% of the estate. The partner receives nothing. Zero. No exceptions.

The California Probate Cost Calculator: What Your Family Will Pay

Quick Answer: California Probate Code § 10800 sets statutory attorney fees at 4% of the first $100,000, 3% of the next $100,000, 2% of the next $800,000, and 1% of the next $9,000,000. For a $1.5 million San Diego home, that is $28,000 in attorney fees alone—before court costs, appraiser fees, or executor commissions.

Let us calculate exactly what probate costs for California homeowners.

The Statutory Fee Formula (Probate Code § 10800):

  • 4% on the first $100,000 = $4,000
  • 3% on the next $100,000 = $3,000
  • 2% on the next $800,000 = $16,000
  • 1% on the next $9,000,000 = (varies by estate size)
Estate ValueStatutory Attorney FeesCourt Filing FeesEstimated Total Probate Cost
$500,000$13,000$435$15,000+
$850,000 (median SD home)$20,500$435$23,000+
$1,500,000$28,000$435$32,000+
$156,000,000 (Prince)$1,573,000$500+$1,600,000+

The “Prince Ratio” for San Diego Homeowners:
If Prince owned a home in La Jolla valued at $1.5 million, his estate would have paid $28,000 in statutory attorney fees just for probating that single asset. His actual $156 million estate triggered $1,573,000 in statutory fees. A trust would have eliminated every dollar of those fees.

Additionally, these figures exclude:

  • Executor/administrator commissions (additional 2-4% under Probate Code § 10800)
  • Appraiser fees ($500-$1,500 per property)
  • Court reporter fees for contested hearings
  • Publication costs for creditor notices ($300-$500)

Trust vs Will: Why a Will Still Means Probate

Quick Answer: A will guarantees probate. A trust bypasses probate entirely. That is not marketing. That is California Probate Code. With a will, your family files a petition with the San Diego Superior Court Probate Department (Department 43, Central Courthouse, 1100 Union St.). With a trust, your successor trustee distributes assets directly. No court. No delays. No public records.

Here is what actually happens with a will in San Diego:

StepWillTrust
Upon deathFamily files probate petitionSuccessor trustee takes over
Court filing fee$435-$500$0
Creditor notice period4 months (minimum)120 days (Probate Code § 16061.7)
Court backlog wait9-12 months$0 (no court)
Asset distributionAfter court approvalAfter 120-day notice period
PrivacyPublic recordCompletely private
Total time9-18 monthsAs little as 120 days

Strategic Note: A trust does not eliminate the 120-day creditor notice period under Probate Code § 16061.7. This is a common misconception. However, the trust administrator handles this directly with creditors without court involvement. Distribution can begin after 120 days, not 18 months.

The 2026 California Small Estate Limit: Why Most Homeowners Don’t Qualify

Quick Answer: Under California Probate Code § 13100, estates valued under $184,500 (2026 adjusted limit) may avoid formal probate through a simplified procedure. However, the median San Diego home value exceeds $850,000. Most homeowners do not qualify for small estate exceptions.

The 2026 threshold increased from previous years to account for inflation. For estates under $184,500, heirs can file an Affidavit for Collection of Personal Property (form DE-305) without full probate.

Why this does not help most San Diego homeowners:

  • A single San Diego home averages $850,000 – $1,200,000
  • Retirement accounts often exceed $184,500
  • Combined assets almost always exceed the threshold

For example: A San Diego retiree with a $900,000 condo and $200,000 in IRA assets has a $1.1 million estate. The small estate exception does not apply. Full probate is required without a trust.

At buyatrust.com, we advise every San Diego homeowner with assets over $184,500 to create a trust. The cost is minimal compared to probate fees.

San Diego Probate Backlog 2025-2026: The 12-Month Wait

Quick Answer: The San Diego Superior Court Probate Department currently has a 9-12 month backlog for uncontested probate cases. Contested cases stretch to 18-24 months. A trust bypasses this entirely. Your family does not wait for a court calendar.

Current backlog reality (2025-2026):

  • Uncontested probate: 9-12 months from filing to final distribution
  • Contested probate: 18-24 months minimum
  • Hearing scheduling: 3-4 months wait for initial hearing alone

Why the backlog exists:
California has an aging population. San Diego County has over 400,000 residents over 65. The probate court has not added new judges or staff proportionally.

A real San Diego example:
Maria, a San Diego widow in Pacific Beach, died with a will leaving her $1.1 million condo to her two daughters. The daughters filed for probate in January 2025. The initial hearing was scheduled for April 2025 (3 months). The creditor notice period ran 4 months. The court approved final distribution in November 2025 (10 months total). The daughters paid $23,000 in attorney fees and could not sell the condo during the delay—losing a buyer who walked away after 6 months.

With a trust from buyatrust.com: Maria’s successor trustee would have distributed the condo in 120-150 days with no court involvement and no real estate delays.

How to Create a Living Trust in California (Step by Step)

Quick Answer: You create a trust by drafting a trust document, signing it in front of a notary, then transferring your assets into the trust’s name. At buyatrust.com, we handle the drafting, provide in-office notarization, record your deed with the San Diego County Recorder, and give you fully executed funding instructions.

Here is our complete process:

StepActionTimeframeResponsibility
1Initial consultation (phone or in-person)30 minutesYou
2We draft your customized trust documents2-3 business daysbuyatrust.com
3You review and request any changes1-2 daysYou
4In-office signing with notary (we provide)1 hourBoth
5We record your deed with San Diego County Recorder2-3 business daysbuyatrust.com
6We prepare funding transfer letters for banks/brokerages1 business daybuyatrust.com
7You call your bank (5 minutes with our script)1 dayYou
8We issue your Funding Certificate confirming all assets1 daybuyatrust.com

Total time from consultation to fully funded trust: 7-10 business days.

What you receive:

  • Original trust binder with signed, notarized documents
  • Recorded deed showing trust as owner
  • Digital copies of all documents
  • Funding Certificate confirming every asset transfer
  • 120-day notice period guide for your successor trustee
  • Lifetime updates and support

The 120-Day Trust Notice Period (Probate Code § 16061.7)

Quick Answer: Under California Probate Code § 16061.7, after the trust creator (settlor) dies, the successor trustee must provide a mandatory 120-day notice to all heirs and creditors. This is the absolute minimum timeline. No trust distributes assets in “30-60 days” legally.

Why 120 days is the legal minimum:

  • Creditors have 120 days to file claims against the trust
  • Heirs have 120 days to contest the trust
  • The trustee must provide written notice to everyone entitled to inherit

What this means for your family:
Distribution can begin after 120 days, not before. However, unlike probate, the trustee does not need court approval for each distribution. The trustee can also make interim distributions of non-contested assets while waiting for the full period to expire.

At buyatrust.com, we provide every client with a Successor Trustee Guide that explains exactly how to handle the 120-day notice period, including template letters and a compliance checklist.

What Does a Living Trust Cost in California? (2026 Pricing)

Quick Answer: At buyatrust.com, a revocable living trust in California costs $2,500-$4,000 for most individuals and couples. This includes drafting, in-office notarization, deed recording with the county recorder, funding instructions, and a full funding certificate. Compare to probate fees of $15,000-$35,000 on a median San Diego home.

Complete pricing breakdown:

Servicebuyatrust.comTraditional Law FirmDIY Online Kit
Trust draftingIncluded$3,000-$7,000$99-$500
Notarization (in-office)Included$50-$150You pay
Deed recordingIncluded$200-$500You handle
Funding instructionsIncludedOften extraGeneric
Funding certificateIncludedRarely providedNo
Attorney reviewIncluded (attorney-drafted)IncludedNo
Total cost$2,500-$4,000$3,500-$8,000+$200-$800 + your time + errors

The ROI calculation for a San Diego homeowner:

Home ValueProbate CostTrust CostYour Savings
$850,000 (median)$20,500+$3,000$17,500+
$1,200,000$27,000+$3,500$23,500+
$1,500,000$28,000+$3,500$24,500+

These savings exclude: the 9-12 month probate delay, the public record of your assets, and the emotional toll on your family.

Recent 2025-2026 Legal Updates Affecting California Trusts

Quick Answer: The 2025 appellate ruling in Estate of Carver created new scrutiny for trust signings involving elderly grantors. At buyatrust.com, we now include a contemporaneous capacity affidavit with every trust signing—documentation that costs you nothing but prevents years of litigation.

Estate of Carver (2025): The court invalidated a trust signed by an 82-year-old with mild cognitive impairment, despite the attorney’s belief that she understood the document. The winning argument: no independent capacity evaluation at the exact moment of signing.

Pending 2026 legislation (AB 789): This bill proposes safe harbor provisions for no-contest clauses in trusts. If passed, it would provide clearer guidelines for when a beneficiary can challenge a trust without forfeiting their inheritance.

At buyatrust.com, we stay current on all California trust and probate law. Every trust we draft incorporates the latest legal requirements, including:

  • Contemporaneous capacity affidavit
  • Proper no-contest clause language
  • Digital asset provisions (updated for 2025 technology laws)
  • Medicaid clawback protections (where applicable)

6-Step Trust Funding Checklist

TRUST FUNDING CHECKLIST

buyatrust.com — How to avoid probate in California: Complete this checklist

StepCategoryAction Items
1REAL ESTATE☐ Preliminary Change of Ownership Report filed
☐ Grant deed recorded with county recorder
☐ Homeowners insurance updated to trust name
☐ Property tax bill updated to trust name
2BANK ACCOUNTS☐ Checking account retitled to trust
☐ Savings account retitled to trust
☐ CD / money market retitled to trust
☐ Debit cards reissued in trust name
3INVESTMENTS☐ Brokerage account retitled to trust
☐ Stock certificates reissued to trust
☐ Mutual funds transferred to trust
☐ 401(k)/IRA (beneficiary designation only)
4BUSINESS INTERESTS☐ LLC membership transferred to trust
☐ Corporate shares reissued to trust
☐ Partnership interest assigned to trust
5PERSONAL PROPERTY☐ Vehicle titles (DMV transfer to trust)
☐ Vessel titles (if applicable)
☐ Tangible personal property assignment signed
6DIGITAL ASSETS☐ Digital asset inventory completed
☐ Password manager accessible to successor trustee
☐ Online accounts documented (crypto, social, email)
FINALCERTIFICATION☐ Funding Certificate issued by buyatrust.com

Date Completed: _______________


FAQ Section

Question: How do I avoid probate in California?

Answer: Create a revocable living trust and transfer all assets into the trust’s name. When you die, your successor trustee distributes assets directly to heirs without court involvement. At buyatrust.com, we handle the entire process including deed recording and funding instructions.

Question: What happens if you die without a will in California?

Answer: California Probate Code § 6400-6455 dictates exactly who inherits. The court appoints an administrator. Your family waits 9-18 months. Your unmarried partner receives nothing. A trust avoids all of this.

Question: How much does a living trust cost in California?

Answer: At buyatrust.com, a revocable living trust costs $2,500-$4,000 for most individuals and couples. This includes drafting, in-office notarization, deed recording, funding instructions, and a funding certificate. Compare to probate fees of $15,000-$35,000.

Question: How long does probate take in San Diego?

Answer: The San Diego Superior Court Probate Department currently has a 9-12 month backlog for uncontested cases. Contested cases take 18-24 months. A trust bypasses court entirely, with distribution possible after 120 days under Probate Code § 16061.7.

Question: Do I still need a will if I have a trust?

Answer: Yes. At buyatrust.com, we provide a “pour-over will” with every trust. This will directs any assets accidentally left outside the trust into the trust upon death. However, a pour-over will still goes through probate—so we fund your trust completely.

Question: What is the California small estate limit for 2026?

Answer: Under California Probate Code § 13100, estates under $184,500 may avoid formal probate. However, the median San Diego home exceeds $850,000. Most homeowners do not qualify and need a trust.

Question: Can I create my own trust without a lawyer?

Answer: You can, but courts routinely invalidate DIY trusts for improper execution or missing provisions. An unfunded DIY trust is worthless. buyatrust.com provides attorney-drafted, fully funded trusts for less than many DIY kits after accounting for deed recording.

Question: What is the 120-day trust notice period under Probate Code § 16061.7?

Answer: After the trust creator dies, the successor trustee must provide a mandatory 120-day notice to all heirs and creditors. This is the minimum timeline before full distribution. Unlike probate, no court approval is required during this period.

Question: Will a trust protect my assets from creditors?

Answer: A revocable living trust does NOT protect assets from your creditors. You still control the assets, so creditors can reach them. An irrevocable trust can provide asset protection. At buyatrust.com, we explain both options based on your specific situation.

Question: How do I choose a successor trustee for my trust?

Answer: Choose someone financially responsible, geographically available, and likely to outlive you. Adult children are common choices. At buyatrust.com, we recommend naming a primary successor trustee and two alternates. For complex estates, we recommend professional corporate trustees.

Contact buyatrust.com

Ready to avoid probate in California?

Call us: (619) 436-7544

Visit us: 4501 Mission Bay Dr. #3c, San Diego, CA 92109

Start your trust online: https://buyatrust.com/

Trust documents prepared by Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp.

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Subpages (10)

Subpage 1: California Probate Code § 10800 Attorney Fee Calculator

English

Chinese (中文)

  • 标题: 加州遗嘱认证法典第10800条:律师费计算器
  • 关键词: 加州遗嘱认证法典10800, 加州遗嘱认证律师费, 圣地亚哥法定费用计算器
  • 描述: 根据加州遗嘱认证法典第10800条计算确切的法定律师费。了解您的遗产在没有信托的情况下将支付多少。

Hebrew (עברית)

  • כותרת: מחשבון דמי עורך דין לפי קוד פרובטה קליפורניה סעיף 10800
  • מילות מפתח: קוד פרובטה קליפורניה 10800, דמי עורך דין פרובטה קליפורניה, מחשבון דמי פרובטה סן דייגו
  • תיאור: חישוב דמי עורך דין סטטוטוריים לפי סעיף 10800 בקוד הפרובטה של קליפורניה. כמה העיזבון שלכם ישלם ללא נאמנות.

Subpage 2: California Intestacy Laws Explained (Probate Code § 6400-6455)

English

Chinese (中文)

  • 标题: 加州无遗嘱继承法详解(遗嘱认证法典第6400-6455条)
  • 关键词: 加州无遗嘱继承法, 加州无遗嘱死亡, 圣地亚哥遗嘱认证法典6400
  • 描述: 加州遗嘱认证法典第6400-6455条规定了您无遗嘱死亡时的继承人。了解为何无遗嘱会摧毁您的遗愿。

Hebrew (עברית)

  • כותרת: חוקי הירושה בקליפורניה ללא צוואה – הסבר (קוד פרובטה סעיפים 6400-6455)
  • מילות מפתח: חוקי ירושה ללא צוואה קליפורניה, מוות ללא צוואה קליפורניה, קוד פרובטה 6400 סן דייגו
  • תיאור: סעיפים 6400-6455 בקוד הפרובטה של קליפורניה קובעים מי יורש כשאתם נפטרים ללא צוואה.

Subpage 3: Living Trust Cost San Diego 2026

English

Chinese (中文)

  • 标题: 2026年圣地亚哥生前信托费用
  • 关键词: 圣地亚哥生前信托费用, 圣地亚哥信托律师费, 加州生前信托定价
  • 描述: 圣地亚哥生前信托费用:buyatrust.com收费$2,500-$4,000。包含起草、公证、房契记录和完整注资。

Hebrew (עברית)

  • כותרת: מחיר נאמנות חיה בסן דייגו 2026
  • מילות מפתח: עלות נאמנות חיה סן דייגו, דמי עורך דין נאמנות סן דייגו, תמחור נאמנות חיה קליפורניה
  • תיאור: עלות נאמנות חיה בסן דייגו: $2,500-$4,000 ב-buyatrust.com. כולל ניסוח, נוטריון, רישום שטר ומימון מלא.

Subpage 4: San Diego Probate Backlog and Delays 2025-2026

English

Chinese (中文)

  • 标题: 2025-2026年圣地亚哥遗嘱认证积压与延误
  • 关键词: 圣地亚哥遗嘱认证积压, 圣地亚哥遗嘱认证法院延误, 圣地亚哥遗嘱认证时间
  • 描述: 圣地亚哥高等法院遗嘱认证积压:无争议案件需9-12个月。了解信托如何完全绕过等待。

Hebrew (עברית)

  • כותרת: עומס ועיכובים בפרובטה בסן דייגו 2025-2026
  • מילות מפתח: עומס פרובטה סן דייגו, עיכוב בבית משפט לפרובטה סן דייגו, כמה זמן לוקחת פרובטה בסן דייגו
  • תיאור: עומס הפרובטה בבית המשפט העליון של סן דייגו: 9-12 חודשים לתיקים שאינם שנויים במחלוקת.

Subpage 5: California Small Estate Limit 2026 (Probate Code § 13100)

English

Chinese (中文)

  • 标题: 2026年加州小额遗产限额(遗嘱认证法典第13100条)
  • 关键词: 2026年加州小额遗产限额, 遗嘱认证法典13100, 加州小额遗产避免遗嘱认证
  • 描述: 2026年加州小额遗产限额:根据遗嘱认证法典第13100条为$184,500。大多数圣地亚哥房主超过此限额,需要信托。

Hebrew (עברית)

  • כותרת: תקרת עיזבון קטן בקליפורניה 2026 (קוד פרובטה סעיף 13100)
  • מילות מפתח: תקרת עיזבון קטן קליפורניה 2026, קוד פרובטה 13100, הימנעות מפרובטה לעיזבונות קטנים קליפורניה
  • תיאור: תקרת עיזבון קטן בקליפורניה 2026: $184,500 לפי סעיף 13100 בקוד הפרובטה. רוב בעלי הבתים בסן דייגו ח

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IMPORTANT DISCLAIMERS:

AI-Generated Content Disclosure: The core legal information is based on California law, but the presentation and structure were AI-enhanced for educational clarity.

Legal Disclaimer: This video is for educational and informational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice, nor does it create an attorney-client relationship. You should consult directly with a qualified California attorney licensed in your state for advice on your specific legal situation. Laws and procedures change, and your individual circumstances require personalized counsel.

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