Chris J. Aiello, P.C. · Estate Planning
Almost everyone who starts thinking about estate planning runs into the same question: do I need a will, a trust, or both? The two get talked about as if they are interchangeable, but they do different jobs, and choosing the wrong one, or assuming a will alone covers everything, is one of the most common and costly estate planning mistakes Illinois families make. This guide explains the real difference, in plain terms, so you can tell which one fits your situation.
A will, formally a last will and testament, is a written document that says who inherits your property, who you want as the executor to carry out your wishes, and, if you have minor children, who you want as their guardian. It only takes effect after you die, and in Illinois it has to be signed and witnessed by two people to be valid.
Here is the part most people do not realize: a will does not avoid probate. When you die with a will, your estate still goes through the Illinois probate court so a judge can confirm the will, the executor can be appointed, debts and taxes can be paid, and the property can be distributed. A will tells the court what you want. It does not keep the court out of it.
For many families a will is still the foundation of the plan, especially because it is the only place you can name a guardian for your children. To see what a properly drafted will covers, visit our wills page.
A revocable living trust is a legal arrangement you create while you are alive. You move your assets, your home, your accounts, and your investments, into the trust, and you keep controlling them as the trustee for as long as you are able. When you die, a successor trustee you named distributes everything according to your instructions, without going to court.
That is the headline advantage: a properly funded living trust avoids probate. The assets in the trust pass to your family privately and without the months of court supervision that probate involves. A trust also lets someone step in to manage your affairs if you become incapacitated, something a will cannot do at all. Our living trust page walks through how trusts are set up and, just as importantly, funded.
The clearest way to compare them is point by point:
| Factor | Will | Living trust |
|---|---|---|
| Avoids probate | No | Yes, if it is funded |
| Takes effect | At death | Right away, and during incapacity |
| Privacy | Public court record | Private |
| Upfront cost | Lower | Higher |
| Names a guardian for minor children | Yes | No (a will is required) |
| Handles incapacity | No | Yes, via a successor trustee |
| Illinois estate-tax planning | Limited | Yes (lets a married couple use both exclusions) |
For most Illinois families the honest answer is not one or the other, it is the right combination. A common setup pairs a funded living trust (to avoid probate and handle incapacity) with a simple pour-over will (to catch anything left out of the trust and to name guardians for children). Add durable powers of attorney for finances and health care, and you have a plan that protects you during life and your family after.
The most common mistake is not choosing wrong, it is doing nothing, or setting up a trust and never funding it. An unfunded trust controls nothing, and a will alone still sends your estate to court.
If you want a sense of the investment involved, we break it down in how much estate planning costs in Illinois. And to understand what happens with no plan at all, see what happens if you die without a will in Illinois.
Illinois has its own estate tax, separate from the federal one, and the will-versus-trust decision often really lives here. As of 2026 the Illinois exclusion is $4,000,000 per person. It is not indexed to inflation, and unlike the federal exemption (about $14,000,000 and portable between spouses) Illinois allows no portability. A married couple with a home and retirement savings can cross $4,000,000 without feeling wealthy, and with only simple wills the surviving spouseโs estate can owe Illinois tax on everything above that line. Trust-based planning, such as a credit-shelter or marital trust, lets a couple use both $4,000,000 exclusions, which a will alone cannot do. If your estate is anywhere near that range, the answer is usually a trust, and it is worth confirming the current exclusion for the year of death.
A quick way to place yourself:
A good estate planning attorney does not push everyone toward the most expensive option. The right plan depends on what you own, your family situation, and your goals, and a short conversation usually makes the answer clear. We help Illinois families decide whether a will, a trust, or both fits, draft the documents correctly, and, with a trust, handle the funding step that so many plans miss. Learn more on our estate planning page.
Neither is universally better; they do different jobs. A will names guardians and directs your estate but still goes through probate. A funded living trust avoids probate and handles incapacity but cannot name guardians for children. Most complete plans use both.
No. A will tells the Illinois probate court how you want your estate handled, but the estate still goes through the court. To keep assets out of probate, you generally need a funded living trust or other non-probate arrangements such as beneficiary designations and proper titling.
Usually yes. Even with a trust, a short pour-over will catches any asset you did not move into the trust, and it is the only document that can name guardians for your minor children.
The Illinois Probate Act sets the requirements. A will must be in writing, signed by you, and witnessed by two credible witnesses. A trust must be properly created and actually funded with your assets. Documents that are not executed correctly can fail entirely.
Source: Illinois Probate Act of 1975, 755 ILCS 5 (ilga.gov).
Not sure whether you need a will, a trust, or both? The first conversation is free, and it is the fastest way to get a clear answer for your situation.
Related reading: how to avoid probate in Illinois.