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Virginia Gardens Estate Planning & Probate Attorney

Wills, revocable living trusts, powers of attorney, and probate guidance for Virginia Gardens families โ€” prepared under current Florida law and handled conveniently by phone, video, or appointment.

Cornerstone Wealth & Legacy Law helps Virginia Gardens families put the right documents in place โ€” wills, revocable living trusts, powers of attorney, and health care directives โ€” and guides them through probate when a loved one passes. Virginia Gardens is in Miami-Dade County, where estates are administered through Florida's Eleventh Judicial Circuit. Florida estate planning law is the same statewide, but where your estate is handled is decided at the county level, so this page explains what that means for Virginia Gardens.

Estate Planning in Virginia Gardens

A complete Florida estate plan usually rests on a few core documents: a will, often a revocable living trust, a durable power of attorney, a health care surrogate designation, and a living will. Together they decide who manages your affairs if you cannot, who inherits, and whether your family must go through probate. For Virginia Gardens homeowners, a funded revocable trust is often the most direct way to keep the home and accounts out of the probate court entirely.

Probate for Virginia Gardens Families

Probate for Virginia Gardens residents is filed at the Miami-Dade County courthouse in Miami, the county seat, part of Florida's Eleventh Judicial Circuit. Because Florida probate is handled largely through electronic court filing, a personal representative usually does not need to travel to the courthouse โ€” but the process still follows strict statutory deadlines, including the creditor notice period under Florida Statutes Chapter 733. We guide Virginia Gardens families through both formal administration and summary administration, and, where possible, help them avoid probate entirely with proper planning. For a county-wide overview, see our Miami-Dade County estate planning page.

Serving Virginia Gardens & the Surrounding Area

Nearby, we also help families in Miami, Miami Beach, Hialeah, Coral Gables, Doral, and Aventura and across the rest of Miami-Dade County. Explore our Miami-Dade County hub or all areas we serve across Florida.

How We Work With Virginia Gardens Clients

Cornerstone serves Virginia Gardens clients primarily by phone and video: we talk through your situation, prepare your documents, and walk you through signing them correctly under Florida's witness and notary rules. In-person meetings are available by appointment in the Daytona Beach area when you would rather sit down face to face. Every plan is offered as a self-guided option or an Attorney-Guided plan personally reviewed by Arthur Simpson, Esq.

Start Your Virginia Gardens Estate Plan Online โ€” the Easy Way

You don't have to take weeks off or sit through multiple office visits to protect your family. Cornerstone's guided online process lets Virginia Gardens residents put a Florida-valid will, revocable living trust, durable power of attorney, and health care directives in place from home, in three simple steps:

  1. Answer a few questions. Tell us about your family and assets in our secure online intake โ€” most people finish in about 20 minutes.
  2. We prepare your documents. Your plan is drafted under current Florida law, with an Attorney-Guided option personally reviewed by Arthur Simpson, Esq.
  3. Sign correctly. We walk you through Florida's witness and notary requirements โ€” by video or in person โ€” so your documents are valid.

Ready to begin? Build your plan now with the Florida Estate Kit โ€” self-guided or attorney-guided. Not sure where to start? Take the free 2-minute Estate Plan Score quiz to see what your Virginia Gardens family needs, or book a free 20-minute call.

Virginia Gardens Estate Planning & Probate FAQs

Where is probate filed for Virginia Gardens residents?

Probate for Virginia Gardens residents is filed with the Clerk of the Circuit Court for Miami-Dade County, part of Florida's Eleventh Judicial Circuit. The county courthouse is in Miami, the county seat. Because Florida probate uses electronic filing, a personal representative in Virginia Gardens usually does not need to travel to the courthouse.

What estate planning documents do I need in Virginia Gardens?

Most Virginia Gardens adults benefit from at least a will, a durable power of attorney, a health care surrogate designation, and a living will. Homeowners and parents of minor children, and anyone who wants to avoid probate, should also consider a revocable living trust. The right combination depends on your assets and family situation under Florida law.

How can a Virginia Gardens family avoid probate?

The most common way for a Virginia Gardens family to avoid probate is a properly funded revocable living trust, which lets your Florida assets pass to your beneficiaries without a court filing. Beneficiary designations, payable-on-death accounts, and certain deeds can also transfer specific assets outside probate. A trust only works if it is funded by retitling assets into it.

Can I handle my Virginia Gardens estate plan remotely?

Yes. Cornerstone serves Virginia Gardens clients by phone and video โ€” we discuss your situation, prepare your documents, and guide you through signing under Florida's witnessing and notarization requirements. In-person appointments are available in the Daytona Beach area when preferred.

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Cornerstone Wealth & Legacy Law, PLLC is licensed in the State of Florida and serves clients throughout the state. This page is attorney advertising and general information, not legal advice, and does not create an attorney-client relationship. Estate planning and probate outcomes depend on your individual facts and the proper execution of documents under Florida law.