Chris Aiello Law

📍 Villa Park, IL — Serving DuPage & Cook County

Estate Planning · DuPage County, Illinois

An Illinois Last Will and Testament Done Right

Wills, trusts, and the planning that keeps your family in control and out of court, from the same DuPage County firm since 1990.

0Years of counsel
0Practice areas
1990Established

A last will and testament does three things in Illinois. It names who receives your assets after death. It nominates guardians for any minor children. And it designates an executor to handle your estate through probate. Without a valid will, the Illinois Probate Act decides all three for you — often in ways that don’t match what you would have chosen.

We’ve drafted Illinois wills for DuPage County families since 1990. The work is part legal precision and part listening — understanding your family, your assets, and the situations you want to plan around. Then we put it in writing in a way the probate court will honor.

What's Included

Wills That Actually Cover Your Family

A well-drafted Illinois will addresses far more than just who gets what.

Guardian Nominations

Name who will raise your minor children if both parents pass. Without this, the court decides.

Specific Bequests

Pass specific assets — heirlooms, real estate, business interests — to specific people.

Executor Selection

Designate who will manage your estate through probate. Naming wisely matters.

Residuary Clauses

Catch-all provisions so any asset not specifically named still passes as you intended.

Self-Proving Affidavit

Required Illinois language so your will is admitted to probate without witness testimony.

Codicil & Amendment

When life changes, we update your will properly — not by handwritten notes on the original.

The Process

How We Draft Your Will

01

Free Consultation

We sit down — in person or by phone — and understand your family, assets, and concerns.

02

Flat-Fee Quote

You get a clear price before we start drafting. No hourly billing surprises.

03

Drafting & Review

We draft your will, walk you through every clause in plain English, and revise until it’s right.

04

Signing Ceremony

Proper Illinois signing with two witnesses and notary. Originals secured, copies to you.

Why Use an Attorney

Why a Will-in-a-Box Isn't Enough

Illinois-specific requirements

Online templates often miss Illinois witness and notary requirements — invalid wills cost more than legal ones.

Family situations

Blended families, special needs children, and small businesses need clauses templates don’t have.

Probate avoidance

We’ll tell you when a trust is better than a will — and when you genuinely just need a will.

Tax considerations

Illinois has its own estate tax above the federal threshold. Smart drafting can save your heirs significant money.

Coordination with other documents

Your will should work with your POA, beneficiary designations, and any trusts — not contradict them.

Flat-fee pricing

You’ll know exactly what your will costs before we start. Most families pay less than they expect.

Service Area

Serving DuPage & Cook County

From our Villa Park office, we represent clients across DuPage County and the western suburbs of Chicago.

Villa ParkElmhurstLombardWheatonOak BrookDowners GroveAddisonOak ParkGlen EllynBloomingdaleHinsdaleWestmontDuPage CountyCook County
Wills FAQ

Common Questions About Illinois Wills

A simple Illinois will from our firm is a flat fee in the low hundreds. More complex wills — with trusts, business interests, or special needs planning — cost more. We give you exact pricing at your free consultation before any work begins.

Illinois intestacy laws decide everything: who gets your assets, who raises your minor children, and who administers your estate. Spouses don’t automatically get everything — children share with the surviving spouse. The court appoints an executor, not necessarily someone you’d choose.

Technically yes — but Illinois requires specific witness and notary procedures, and template language often misses important contingencies. Many DIY wills fail in probate or create disputes between family members. The cost of a proper will is almost always less than the cost of fixing a flawed one.

Review every 3-5 years and after any major life event: marriage, divorce, birth of a child, death of a beneficiary, major change in assets, or a move to a different state. Small changes can be made with a codicil; larger changes warrant a fresh will.

Yes. Each spouse needs an individual will — Illinois doesn’t recognize joint wills as a substitute. We typically draft mirror wills for spouses that reference each other but stand independently.

No — a will is the document used in probate. To avoid probate entirely, you need a living trust, properly titled assets, and beneficiary designations on accounts. We can help you set up that broader plan if appropriate.

Ready to Draft Your Will?

Most clients are surprised at how fast and affordable it is. A free 30-minute consultation tells you exactly what you need and what it costs.