Paper Burns, Pixels Don’t: Estate Planning In 2026
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A quiet revolution just reshaped estate planning in North Carolina: a properly certified, attorney‑stored electronic copy of your will can now be probated like the original. We unpack what that means in real life—fewer frantic searches for paper, fewer hearings over missing originals, and a smoother path for families when they need clarity most. With all 100 counties live on e‑courts, the shift from pen and ink to secure digital storage isn’t a trend; it’s the new backbone of reliable probate.
We walk through the essential safeguards that make e‑wills work. A North Carolina attorney must certify that the digital file is a full and complete copy of your attested will, confirm that you authorized electronic storage, and advise you that tearing up paper no longer revokes a converted will. Revocation still belongs to you—but it now happens in writing, often via a new will that expressly revokes prior wills and codicils, or a written revocation filed alongside the stored record. This paper trail removes guesswork and helps courts honor intent without costly detours.
You’ll also hear how our secure “vault” system protects documents with bank‑level encryption and strict access controls, why this reduces the risk of “slip‑sheet” tampering, and how families benefit from a simple “click, click, file” experience when it’s time to open probate. Have an older will? You don’t need to start from scratch. Bring it to a North Carolina attorney to certify, convert, and store, so the court can rely on a secure digital copy if the original is lost or destroyed. We also touch on updating plans over time with new wills and codicils and keeping a clean history that’s easy for executors to follow.
Ready to future‑proof your estate plan with less stress and more certainty? Subscribe, share this episode with someone who handles family documents, and leave a review with your top question about going digital—what would give you the most peace of mind?