How ready is your estate plan?
Eight documents and decisions do most of the work of protecting your family. Check off what you already have — the wheel fills in as you go, and your next steps come with it.
Nothing you enter is saved or sent anywhere — the math runs entirely in your browser.
Your estate readiness score
0 / 100
0 of 8 items in place — Just starting. Here's the good news: every empty spoke is a fixable gap, and most take one conversation to close.
Just starting
Your next moves (educational, not advice)
- Learn what a will covers, then meet an estate attorney to draft one.
- Ask an estate attorney whether a living trust fits your situation.
- Name someone who can act financially if you can't.
- Put your medical wishes in writing.
WealthChem Estate Readiness worksheet — educational checklist only
0 of 8 items in place → score 0/100 (Just starting).
In place: none yet.
Still to do: Will, Trust review, Financial power of attorney, Advance health-care directive, Beneficiary designations current, Asset titling reviewed, Guardianship for minors, Digital assets plan.
Generated by wealthchem.com/tools/estate-readiness. Educational only, not legal advice — estate documents should be prepared by a licensed estate-planning attorney.
The formula, in the open
Estate Readiness = Will + Trust Review + POA + Advance Directive + Beneficiaries + Asset Titling + Guardianship + Digital Assets
Each item counts equally: 8 of 8 scores 100.Assumptions
- Each of the eight items carries equal weight in the score
- “In place” means the document or review is current — signed, and revisited after major life changes
- The checklist covers common estate-planning basics for U.S. households
Limitations
- A readiness snapshot, not a legal review — only a licensed estate-planning attorney can say what your situation needs
- State laws differ — documents drafted in one state may need updates after a move
- It can't judge document quality — an outdated will checks the box but may no longer say what you want
Want the concept behind the math? Why every family needs a will →