Wills Attorney
- Estate Planning
A will isn't just a legal document—it's the last clear thing you can say for yourself.
Lisa Ward Law, LLC is a wills and estate planning firm based in Wamego. The team works with everyday Kansans to make sure their wishes are written down, legally sound, and actually usable when the time comes.
What a Will Actually Does
A will—formally called a last will and testament—names who gets your property after you die, appoints a personal representative (sometimes called an executor) to settle your estate, lets you designate a guardian for minor children, and gives the people you leave behind a clear road map instead of a pile of questions.
Without one, Kansas law decides who gets what. Under Kansas intestacy law (K.S.A. 59-502), the state follows a default distribution formula that may not reflect your wishes at all. Your property might pass to someone you’d never have chosen, or be divided in a way that creates real hardship for the people you cared most about.
Kansas Will Requirements: The Basics
Kansas law sets specific requirements for a valid will under K.S.A. 59-606. To be valid, a will must be:
- In writing (handwritten or typed)
- Signed by you, the person making the will (called the testator)
- Witnessed by two competent adults who sign in your presence
Kansas does recognize holographic wills—wills that are entirely handwritten and signed by you, without witnesses. But holographic wills are easier to challenge and easier to misinterpret. A will prepared with an attorney is almost always the better choice.
After you pass away, your will typically goes through probate—the court-supervised process of validating the document and distributing your estate. For Pottawatomie County residents, that means the District Court in Westmoreland. Lisa Ward Law knows how that process works and can help your family navigate it, or help structure your estate to keep things simple.
What Wills Can and Can't Do
A will directs who receives your property, names a personal representative to settle your estate, establishes a testamentary trust for minor children if needed, and designates a guardian for them. It can also spell out your wishes for burial or cremation.
What a will can’t do is equally important. It doesn’t control assets that pass by beneficiary designation—like life insurance or retirement accounts—or property held in joint tenancy. Those transfer outside of probate entirely, regardless of what your will says.
That’s why a will is usually one piece of a broader estate plan—not the whole thing. Depending on your situation, Lisa Ward Law may recommend pairing it with a durable power of attorney or a trust to make sure nothing falls through the cracks.
Common Mistakes People Make With Wills
DIY documents that don't hold up
Online will forms can seem like a bargain, but a will that doesn’t meet Kansas’s execution requirements—or uses vague language—can be contested or invalidated entirely.
Forgetting to update Your Will
A will made before a divorce, a major land purchase, or the death of a named beneficiary may no longer reflect what you want. Revisit it when life changes.
Relying on a will for everything
If your retirement account still names an ex-spouse as beneficiary, your will won’t override that. Beneficiary designations are separate and need to be reviewed alongside it.
Working With Lisa Ward Law
Lisa Ward Law is a small firm—and that’s intentional. Clients work with an attorney who knows their file and knows the local courts.
The firm understands what shows up in Pottawatomie County estate planning: farmland that’s been in a family for generations, blended families, small business owners who need their will to work alongside a succession plan, and older Kansans who want to make things easy for their children and grandchildren.
Every will starts with a real conversation about your life, your family, and what matters to you—not a form with your name dropped in.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the average cost of a will in Kansas?
Do I need a lawyer to make a will in Kansas?
What's the difference between a will and a trust?
A will goes through probate and becomes a public court record. A trust can distribute assets privately, often without probate at all. Many people use both.
What should I bring to a will consultation?
A general picture of what you own, who you want to receive it, and who you’d trust to manage your estate. You don’t need everything perfectly organized—that’s what the consultation is for.
Does a will have to be filed with the court?
Not before you die. In Kansas, a will is filed with the probate court after death as part of the probate process. Keep it somewhere safe and make sure your personal representative knows where to find it.
What Our Past Clients Have Said
Posted on Ashton TorreyTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. Wonderful!!Posted on Micki Self-LovelandTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. Lisa Ward’s expertise in real estate/tenant law is exceptional. She provided a practical and affordable way to address a legal challenge related to an eviction. She is timely and knowledgeable and did not belabor the conversation - keeping the costs for services minimal.Posted on Molly BTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. Lisa feels more like a family advisor than a lawyer and made our estate planning experience comfortable, informative, and supportive.Posted on Louis BeauchampTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. Lisa was very professional and super friendly. She and her staff were timely and attentive with questions and concerns. I would highly recommend her to someone looking for a warm, straightforward and extremely knowledgeable attorney.Posted on DeAnn HarringTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. Lisa does a fantastic job, and very easy to talk, 10/10 recommend.
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Let us help you create a confidence-inspiring estate plan that ensures your future is secured. Click or call today to get your consultation with Lisa Ward Law.
