Get Your Texas Legal Documents — Fast, Affordable, and Attorney-Prepared
Every form below is drafted by a licensed Texas attorney with four decades of experience. You get a customized legal document — not a generic template — at a fraction of traditional law firm pricing.
Here's how it works:
Complete the secure questionnaire for the document(s) you need.
We'll send you an engagement letter to review and sign.
Once signed and payment is received, your documents are typically delivered within a few days.
No office visit required. No surprise fees. Just clear, reliable legal documents when your family needs them.
By submitting any form, I understand that this does not create an attorney-client relationship and that no legal advice has been or will be provided until a formal engagement agreement is executed.
Texas Will
Couple with Children — $800 for individual or $1200 for both spouses
Couple with No Minor Children — $500 for individual or $750 for both spouses
Individual with No Minor Children — $500
Texas Last Will and Testament
Who needs this: Any Texas adult who wants to control what happens to their property, name someone to handle their estate, and — if they have minor children — designate a guardian.
What you get: A fully customized Last Will and Testament drafted to your specific family situation, assets, and wishes. Includes disposition of real and personal property, a testamentary trust for any minor children, guardian nominations, executor designation, and a self-proving affidavit for smoother probate.
Why it matters: Without a will, Texas law decides who gets your property and who raises your children — often not what you'd choose. A properly drafted will also avoids the ambiguity and execution errors that can cause a will to be challenged or delayed in probate.
Pricing:
Individual (no minor children) — $500
Couple, no minor children — $750 for both spouses
Individual with minor children — $800
Couple with minor children — $1,200 for both spouses
Spouses complete separate questionnaires.
If being completed by husband and wife, complete a separate questionnaire for each spouse.
Consent to Treat Minor Child (Texas)
$50 per child
Authorization for Non-Parent to Consent to Obtain Medical Treatment
Who needs this: Parents who leave their child in the care of a grandparent, relative, coach, or other trusted adult — especially for extended trips, summer stays, or any situation where the parent may be unreachable.
What you get: A signed authorization allowing a designated non-parent to consent to medical, dental, psychological, or surgical treatment on behalf of your child. Can be drafted for routine care, emergency situations, or specific treatments.
Why it matters: Without this document, a caregiver may be unable to authorize urgent medical treatment if they can't reach you. It's a simple, inexpensive safeguard — and one most parents don't think about until they need it.
Durable Power of Attorney
Who needs this: Any adult who wants to designate a trusted person to manage financial and property matters if they become incapacitated or simply need assistance.
What you get: A Texas statutory durable power of attorney appointing an agent to act on your behalf for financial matters — including real estate transactions, banking, investments, retirement accounts, tax matters, and government benefits.
Why it matters: Without this document, if you become incapacitated, your family may have to go to court to obtain guardianship just to pay your bills or manage your accounts. This document avoids that process entirely.
Statutory Durable Power of Attorney (Texas)
$90
Directive to Physicians (Texas) - also known as Living Will
$90
Living Will
Who needs this: Any adult who wants their end-of-life medical wishes clearly documented so family members and physicians aren't left guessing.
What you get: A Texas Directive to Physicians (commonly called a living will) that instructs your doctors on life-sustaining treatment if you are diagnosed with a terminal condition or an irreversible condition and are unable to speak for yourself.
Why it matters: Without written instructions, life-or-death medical decisions fall to your family — often during a crisis, without knowing what you would have wanted. This document removes that burden and ensures your wishes are followed.
Medical Power of Attorney (Texas) and HIPAA authorization
$100
Healthcare Power of Attorney / Designation of Health Care Agent
Who needs this: Any adult who wants a trusted person empowered to make healthcare decisions on their behalf if they are incapacitated due to illness, injury, or surgery.
What you get: A Texas Medical Power of Attorney designating a healthcare agent authorized to accept or refuse treatments, surgeries, medications, and life support on your behalf — including end-of-life decisions. Also includes a HIPAA authorization so your agent can access your medical records and communicate with your providers.
Why it matters: A Durable Power of Attorney covers finances. This document covers your body and your medical care. Together, they ensure someone you trust — not a hospital or a court — is making decisions for you when you can't.
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The information on this website is for general educational and informational purposes only and is not intended as legal advice. It does not create an attorney-client relationship. No attorney-client relationship is formed until a formal written engagement agreement is signed and any conflicts are cleared.
This site is intended solely for Texas residents. Laws vary by state, and nothing here should be relied upon for non-Texas matters.
We do not provide legal advice through blog posts, articles, or automated tools. Any personalized advice requires a consultation.