Estate Planning Made Simple

Clear, state-specific education to help families understand wills, trusts, and planning decisions—without sales pressure.

New to estate planning? Start with the basics.
Already planning? Go straight to your state’s resources.

How AEPS Works

1️⃣ Learn the Basics
Short national videos explaining wills, trusts, probate, and key planning decisions.

2️⃣ Choose Your State
Understand how estate planning works where you live.

3️⃣ Take the Next Step
Explore trusted, state-specific resources and local guidance when you’re ready.

Who We Help

The American Estate Planning Series™ is designed to help families and estate planning attorneys better understand and communicate estate planning — in plain English.

Families & Retirees

Learn how wills, trusts, and estate planning really work — so you can protect your family, avoid costly mistakes, and make informed decisions with confidence.

Estate Planning Attorneys

Tools, education, and communication strategies to help you better serve clients and grow a thriving, trusted estate planning practice.

Why State-Specific Estate Planning Matters

Estate planning is governed primarily by state law, not federal rules. While the basic concepts—wills, trusts, probate, and powers of attorney—are similar nationwide, the details that matter most often change from state to state. Generic information can be helpful for understanding the big picture, but it can break down quickly when applied to real people, real property, and real families.

The American Estate Planning Series exists to bridge that gap: combining clear, national-level education with accurate, state-specific guidance—so families can learn with confidence and know when local expertise truly matters.

Active States

State-specific estate planning resources are currently available in the following states, with additional states added over time.

Florida
Louisiana
Texas
California (Coming Soon)
More states coming

Not sure where to start? We’ll guide you.

Start with the basics, or go directly to your state’s estate planning resources.

No sales pressure. Clear education. State-specific when it matters.