
Pricing
Flat fees. Published before you ask.
Most Arizona estate plans cost $4,000 to $5,000+. Ours start at $500. No hourly meter, no “starting at,” no surprises at signing.
Updated May 13, 2026.
Get started
Pick a package. Start in two minutes.
Pay up front, then complete your intake. If your situation falls outside the standard process, the intake will tell you and you’ll be refunded or rerouted to Edward Law Firm for separate legal services.
Single Living Trust Package
$1,200
Revocable living trust, pour-over will, POAs, healthcare docs, certificate of trust.
Get startedMarried Living Trust Package
$1,500
Joint revocable living trust, pour-over wills, POAs, healthcare docs, certificate of trust.
Get startedReciprocal Wills Package
$1,750
Reciprocal wills for spouses + 4 POAs + 2 living wills, priced for the pair.
Get startedBeneficiary Deed
$330
A single simple Arizona beneficiary deed, no estate plan required. Keep one property out of probate.
Get startedPOA Pair (one person)
$500
Financial power of attorney + healthcare power of attorney for one person. The two documents that cover you if you can't speak for yourself.
Get startedCouple's POA Package
$1,000
Financial + healthcare powers of attorney for both spouses. Four documents, priced at the published per-document rate.
Get started7-day satisfaction guarantee
If the drafts don’t match what you described at intake, we’ll either fix them or refund you in full. Seven days from the day we deliver the first drafts. No questions, no hassle.
Payments processed by Stripe. Hawthorne Legacy Advisors provides self-help document preparation; it is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice. The published prices are for the document-preparation product. Optional attorney review is available as a separate paid service through Edward Law Firm, PLLC.
Listed prices are for standard scenarios. Complex estates or non-standard situations (out-of-state property, business interests, blended-family planning, special-needs trusts) are quoted on the consultation call.
Revocable Living Trusts
Revocable Living Trusts
Avoid probate, keep your estate private, and give your family a clear roadmap. Attorney-drafted, Arizona-specific.
Single Living Trust
Revocable living trust for one settlor. Includes the trust agreement, certification of trust, and trust transfer instructions.
Married-Couple Living Trust
Joint revocable living trust for spouses. Same scope as the single trust, structured for two settlors.
Wills
Wills
A will names guardians for minor children, directs how assets pass, and provides essential backup for any trust-based plan.
Basic Will (Single)
Last Will and Testament for one individual. Includes guardian nominations for minor children if applicable.
Reciprocal Wills (Spouses)
Mirror wills for a married couple. Each spouse leaves to the other, with the same contingent beneficiaries.
Non-Reciprocal Wills (Couple)
Separate wills for a couple with different beneficiary terms. Common for blended families or prior marriages.
Powers of Attorney
Powers of Attorney
Powers of attorney let a trusted agent act on your behalf if you can't. Arizona-compliant, ready for hospital, bank, or court use.
Healthcare Power of Attorney
Names an agent to make healthcare decisions for you if you're incapacitated. Pairs with a HIPAA waiver.
Financial Power of Attorney
Authorizes an agent to manage your finances if you can't. Bank accounts, bills, real estate.
General Durable Power of Attorney
Name TBCBroad authority covering legal and personal affairs beyond the financial and healthcare specifics. Often elected alongside the other two.
Deeds
Deeds
An Arizona beneficiary deed transfers your real estate to your chosen beneficiary outside of probate. Included with a trust; available on its own too. Most homes only need the simple deed.
Beneficiary Deed (with your trust)
One simple beneficiary deed for your Arizona residence is included when you purchase a living trust package. Recording fees billed at cost.
Additional Beneficiary Deed (with your trust)
Each additional simple beneficiary deed beyond the first, when added to a trust package. For a second property, a rental, or land.
Beneficiary Deed (standalone)
A single simple beneficiary deed prepared on its own, with no other estate planning documents. The fastest way to keep one Arizona property out of probate.
Deed for Special Situations
Name TBCFor property with multiple owners, multiple parcels, or an LLC or trust already on the title. Most homes don't need this. A typical home owned in your own name is covered by the simple deed.
Add-Ons
Add-Ons
Optional services that make signing day easier or keep your documents organized.
Remote Online Notarization
Sign your documents from anywhere with a licensed Arizona online notary. One flat fee per signing session, regardless of how many documents you sign.
Estate Planning Binder
Physical, branded binder with tabbed sections, printed copies of every document, and instructions for your successor trustee. Default delivery is digital. This is opt-in.
The model
How we keep prices this low.
Three things, mostly.
A focused service menu.
Trusts, wills, powers of attorney, healthcare directives. And we do them well. No litigation, no business succession on this brand. Narrow scope means efficient drafting and predictable pricing.
Template-first drafting.
Document templates are reviewed by an Arizona attorney, hardened against the Arizona-specific gotchas (community property, beneficiary deeds, the small-estate threshold), and personalized per client. Hours of drafting time you don't pay for.
Lean overhead.
No downtown office. No marble lobby. Consultations by phone or video. Signings by remote online notary when you want. The savings show up in the price.
What you’re not paying for: an hourly meter, a junior associate’s training time, or a marketing budget passed through as legal fees. Full breakdown of where the $4,500 actually goes.
The fine print
- Flat fees as published. Quoted at engagement and honored for 30 days from your free consultation.
- Pass-through costs (such as county recording fees for deeds) are billed separately at cost.
- Spousal will tiers ($750 and $1,000) are total for the pair, not per spouse. POAs are priced per person.
- Prices subject to change.
Market rates cited from the 2025 Arizona Estate Planning Fee Guide, Boland Law Group. Independent firms’ quoted ranges. Last reviewed May 13, 2026.
Ready to make it official?
Free 30-minute consultation. Flat quote at the end of the call. No pressure, no obligation.