On the roadmap
The first estate plan, for 18-to-29.
You don't need a living trust. You need the documents that keep your parents or partner in the loop if something happens — and a will that names who gets your things.
At 18, the legal relationship with your parents changes overnight. Hospitals stop sharing medical information. Banks and landlords stop answering their calls. A young adult plan is the minimum viable set of documents to keep the people who matter informed and authorized.
What's in it
Four documents, one bundle.
Healthcare directive
Who can make medical decisions for you, and your treatment preferences. Parents or partner, with a backup.
HIPAA authorization
Release that lets your named people access medical records — the thing that actually unblocks a hospital in an emergency.
Financial POA
So someone can handle rent, bills, and account access if you're traveling, studying abroad, or incapacitated.
Starter will
Simple bequests — often to parents, siblings, or a partner. Adds a guardian if you already have kids.
Who it's for
Mostly, the people who never thought they needed one.
- College students far from home
- Recent graduates with a first job
- Young professionals renting solo
- New parents with a baby and no plan yet
- People on their first long international trip
- Couples who just moved in together
Young Adult Plan ships after healthcare + POA.
It's the same components, bundled for speed. Tell us you're interested and we'll email when it's live.
Start your will today.
Already covers the beneficiary question. The healthcare and POA pieces follow.