If you are setting up an estate plan in Key West and someone mentions a “pour-over will,” do not let the name throw you. It is one of the more straightforward tools in Florida estate planning once you see how it fits with a revocable living trust. This guide breaks it down for first-timers.
What a Pour-Over Will Actually Does
A pour-over will is a regular Florida will (governed by Chapter 732 of the Florida Probate Code) with one main job: it acts as a safety net. If you create a revocable living trust under Chapter 736 and forget to move an asset into it during your lifetime, the pour-over will “pours” that leftover asset into your trust after death. The trust then distributes it according to the rules you already wrote.
Think of it like the last sweep of the dock before you leave for the season. Most of your belongings are already stowed in the trust. The pour-over will catches anything you left sitting out.
Why Pair It With a Trust
Many Key West residents use a revocable living trust to keep assets out of probate, keep their wishes private, and make things simpler for family who may live out of state or even out of the country. But trusts only control assets that are actually titled in the trust’s name. People buy a new car, open a new account, or inherit money and forget to retitle it. The pour-over will exists for exactly those gaps.
Does a Pour-Over Will Avoid Probate?
This is the part that surprises people. Assets that pass through the pour-over will may still go through Florida probate, because the will only operates after death. If the leftover assets are modest, your family may qualify for summary administration (generally available when the probate estate is $75,000 or less, or when the death occurred more than two years ago). Larger or more complex estates may require formal administration in the Monroe County court system that serves Key West.
The takeaway: a pour-over will reduces the risk of an asset being left out of your plan entirely, but the cleanest way to avoid probate is to fund the trust properly while you are alive.
Florida Formalities You Cannot Skip
For any will in Florida, including a pour-over will, section 732.502 requires that it be signed by you at the end and witnessed by two people who sign in your presence and in the presence of each other. Florida also allows a self-proving affidavit, which lets the court accept the will without tracking down witnesses later. Skipping these formalities is one of the most common reasons a homemade will fails.
Homestead and Your Key West Property
If your Key West home is your homestead under Article X, Section 4 of the Florida Constitution, special protection and inheritance rules apply, and a pour-over will cannot override them. A surviving spouse and minor children have rights that take priority. This is one reason it is worth coordinating your will, trust, and how your home is titled, rather than treating each document in isolation.
A Quick Reality Check
A pour-over will is not a substitute for funding your trust. It is a backstop. The goal is to use it as little as possible by keeping your trust current. Review your titling whenever you buy property, change banks, or have a major life event.
Talk With a Florida Attorney
Florida’s probate, homestead, and trust rules interact in ways that are hard to anticipate on your own, and every Key West family’s situation is different. Before you finalize a pour-over will or any estate plan, speak with a licensed Florida estate planning attorney who can tailor the documents to your assets and goals. This article is general information, not legal advice.
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