What we do
Every service below is offered on a fixed fee. No hourly billing surprises.
A properly drafted single will — your wishes, your executors, your guardians, your specific gifts, and the legal scaffolding to make it survive contact with reality.
Right for: anyone who doesn't have a current will, or whose existing will pre-dates a major life event.
Two wills, written together, that line up properly — including for blended families where the first family's intended inheritance needs protecting.
Especially right for: anyone in a second marriage or who has children from a previous relationship.
A trust written into your wills so that, when one of you dies, the surviving spouse can keep living in the home — but each share of the house eventually passes to the children you intended.
Wrong for: anyone hoping a trust will guarantee protection from care fees (it won't — see the care-fees guide).
Names the people you trust to handle your money if you can't. Has to be set up while you still have capacity.
Right for: everyone, in our view, from sixty onwards.
Names the people you trust to make decisions about your care if you can't speak for yourself. Includes specific preferences on life-sustaining treatment.
Right for: everyone, alongside the financial LPA. They are not the same document.
A structured second-opinion review of existing wills, trusts, and LPAs that haven't been touched in years.
Right for: anyone whose plan was written more than ten years ago, or before a significant life change.
What we don't do
We don't run probate cases ourselves. Where probate is needed, we work with a separately regulated probate provider on your behalf and oversee the process so the family doesn't have to manage it cold.
We won't write a will we wouldn't sign ourselves. If a template will is all you want, we'll tell you who does a good job of those and you can decide.
We plan more holistically. Where a trust would help your wider plan, we'll build it in. Where it's being sold as a care-fees shield, we'll tell you why that doesn't hold up.
Separately regulated, separate skill set. Where we identify the need, we'll refer you to someone properly authorised.