Estate Planning Attorney in Walnut Creek, CA

If you’ve been putting off estate planning, you’re not alone. Most people know they should have a will or a trust, but life gets busy, and it’s easy to push it to the back burner. Here’s the thing, though: without a proper estate plan in California, your family could end up in probate court, dealing with months of delays, steep legal fees, and a process that’s completely public.

Matthew W. Harris, Esq., LLM is a licensed estate planning attorney right here in Walnut Creek. He works with individuals, families, and business owners throughout Contra Costa County and the East Bay to build estate plans that actually protect what matters most. Whether you’re starting from scratch or need to update old documents, Matthew provides clear, personal guidance every step of the way.

Who Matthew W. Harris Helps

Estate planning isn’t just for the wealthy. It’s for anyone who owns a home, has a bank account, has kids, or cares about what happens when they’re gone. Matthew works with:

  • Individuals and couples buying their first home in Walnut Creek, Concord, or Lafayette who need a basic trust and will package
  • Parents of young children who want to name a guardian and protect their kids’ inheritance
  • Business owners in the Shadelands Business Park area or throughout Contra Costa County who need business succession planning alongside their personal estate plan
  • Blended families navigating the complexities of children from prior relationships
  • Retirees near John Muir Medical Center or throughout the East Bay who want to make sure their assets go where they intend, including Medi-Cal planning
  • High net worth individuals looking for tax-smart strategies around the federal estate tax exemption and step-up in basis rules
  • People with out-of-state property who need California-specific guidance

Why Estate Planning Matters in California

California has some of the strictest probate rules in the country. If you pass away without a funded trust or other proper planning in place, your estate will likely go through the California probate process. That means:

  • Months or even years of court proceedings before your loved ones receive anything
  • Statutory attorney and executor fees that can run 4% to 7% of your estate’s gross value
  • A public court record that anyone can look up
  • No guarantee that assets go to who you intended

Here’s a number that surprises most people: under California’s updated rules (AB 2016, effective April 1, 2025), probate is required for personal property worth more than $208,850, and for real estate valued above $750,000. In Walnut Creek, where a typical home often exceeds that threshold, proper planning isn’t just smart. It’s necessary.

A well-drafted estate plan keeps your family out of court, keeps your wishes private, and makes things much easier for the people you leave behind.

Estate Planning Services in Walnut Creek

Matthew’s practice focuses exclusively on estate planning and related areas of law. That focus means you’re not getting a generalist who does estate planning on the side. You’re getting an attorney who has spent his career mastering this area of California law.

Last Will and Testament

A will is the most basic building block of any estate plan. It spells out who gets what, and it names your executor (also called a personal representative) to carry out your wishes. If you have minor children, your will is also where you name a guardian. Without a will, California’s intestate succession laws decide everything for you, and the result may not match what you would have wanted.

Revocable Living Trust

For most Walnut Creek families, a revocable living trust is the smartest planning move you can make. It keeps your estate out of probate entirely, lets you stay in control of your assets while you’re alive, and passes everything to your loved ones quickly and privately when you’re gone. Matthew handles the full process: drafting the trust agreement, transferring assets into it (called trust funding), updating deed transfers and beneficiary designations, and making sure everything is properly titled.

Durable Power of Attorney

A durable power of attorney names someone to handle your financial affairs if you become incapacitated. Without one, your family may have to go to court to get a conservatorship just to pay your bills or manage your accounts. It’s one of the most important documents most people never think about until they need it.

Healthcare Directive and POLST

A healthcare directive (also called an advance healthcare directive) tells your doctors and loved ones what medical care you want if you can’t speak for yourself. It also names a healthcare agent to make decisions on your behalf. Matthew also helps clients understand when a POLST form (Physician Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment) is appropriate alongside their advance directive.

Pour-Over Will

If you have a living trust, a pour-over will works alongside it. Any assets that weren’t moved into your trust during your lifetime get ‘poured over’ into it at death, so everything ends up in the right place.

Beneficiary Designation Review

Your retirement accounts, life insurance policies, and certain bank accounts pass directly to whoever you’ve named as a beneficiary, completely bypassing your will and trust. Matthew reviews these designations to make sure they line up with your overall plan, not just whatever you set up years ago.

Special Needs Trust

If you have a child or family member who receives government benefits like SSI or Medi-Cal, a standard inheritance can disqualify them from those programs. A special needs trust is designed to provide financial support without affecting eligibility.

Irrevocable Trust and Asset Protection

For clients with more complex situations, such as concerns about creditors, estate tax exposure, or Medi-Cal planning, an irrevocable trust may be the right tool. Matthew walks through the tradeoffs carefully so you understand exactly what you’re agreeing to before any documents are signed.

Medi-Cal Planning

Long-term care is expensive, and Medi-Cal planning is one of the most under-used tools in estate planning. Matthew helps families understand how to structure their assets in a way that may preserve what they’ve built while planning ahead for potential care costs.

Trust Administration and Probate

When a loved one passes away, someone has to actually carry out the instructions in the trust or will. Matthew guides successor trustees and executors through that process: notifying beneficiaries, gathering and valuing assets, handling creditor claims, and making distributions. If the estate does go through probate at the Contra Costa County Superior Court, Matthew handles that too.

Why Work With Matthew W. Harris

Matthew holds both a Juris Doctor (J.D.) and a Master of Laws (LLM), a post-graduate law degree that reflects advanced specialization in the law. Most practicing attorneys hold only a J.D. The LLM represents an additional level of academic depth that matters in a field as detailed and consequential as estate planning.

A few things that set his practice apart:

  • Focused practice: Matthew works exclusively on estate planning and related matters. This isn’t a side service at a general law firm.
  • Personalized attention: You work directly with Matthew, not a paralegal or junior associate.
  • Local knowledge: He understands the specific needs of families and business owners in Walnut Creek, Danville, San Ramon, Orinda, Alamo, Pleasant Hill, and across Contra Costa County.
  • Clear fee structure: No surprise billing. Matthew is transparent about costs upfront.
  • In-person and virtual options: Meet at his Walnut Creek office or connect remotely via video consultation. Documents can be signed digitally when appropriate.
  • Active State Bar of California member, serving the local community through the Contra Costa County Bar Association.

What to Expect When You Work With Us

The process doesn’t have to be complicated. Here’s how most estate plans come together:

Step 1: Initial Consultation. You sit down with Matthew (in person or virtually) and talk through your goals, your family situation, and what you own. There’s no pressure and no judgment if you don’t know the right questions to ask. That’s what the consultation is for.

Step 2: Plan Design. Based on your conversation, Matthew recommends the right documents for your situation. This usually includes a trust, will, power of attorney, healthcare directive, and sometimes additional tools depending on your needs.

Step 3: Document Drafting. Matthew drafts your estate planning documents using specialized estate planning tools and reviews them with you to make sure everything reflects your actual wishes.

Step 4: Signing and Execution. Your documents need to be properly signed, witnessed, and notarized to be legally valid in California. Matthew coordinates the execution process so nothing gets missed.

Step 5: Funding Your Trust. A trust only works if your assets are actually transferred into it. Matthew guides you through updating titles on real estate (using a quitclaim deed or deed transfer), changing account ownership, and updating beneficiary designations.

Step 6: Ongoing Support. Life changes. Marriages, divorces, new children, property purchases, business changes. Matthew is available to review and update your plan through a trust restatement or trust amendment when your circumstances shift.

Serving Walnut Creek and the Greater East Bay

Matthew’s Walnut Creek office serves clients throughout Contra Costa County and the broader East Bay Area. Whether you’re in downtown Walnut Creek near Broadway Plaza, in North Gate, Saranap, or Tice Valley, or you’re in a neighboring community, Matthew is ready to help.

Communities served include: Walnut Creek, Concord, Pleasant Hill, Lafayette, Orinda, Danville, San Ramon, Alamo, Martinez, Brentwood, Antioch, Pittsburg, Moraga, and Clayton.

Virtual consultations are available for clients who prefer to meet by video or who aren’t local to the Walnut Creek area.

Start Your Estate Plan Today

The best time to put an estate plan in place is before you need it. If something happened today, would your family know what to do? Would your wishes be followed? Would your kids be protected?

Matthew W. Harris, Esq., LLM is here to make the process straightforward and personal. Contact the office today to schedule a consultation and take the first step toward protecting your family, your assets, and your legacy.

In-person and virtual appointments available.

Frequently Asked Questions About Estate Planning in Walnut Creek

A will alone doesn’t avoid probate in California. If you own a home in Walnut Creek or anywhere else in Contra Costa County, your estate will almost certainly exceed the probate threshold and require court administration after you’re gone. A revocable living trust keeps your estate private, avoids the cost and delay of probate, and makes things far easier for your family. Most people who own real estate in California are better served by a trust-based plan than a will alone.

The cost depends on your situation, but most basic estate plans (trust, will, pour-over will, power of attorney, and healthcare directive) are priced at a flat fee so you know the total cost before you start. That’s almost always far less than the fees your family would pay if your estate went through probate. Matthew is transparent about pricing from the very first conversation.

California’s intestate succession laws take over. The state decides who gets your assets based on a fixed formula, and it may not match what you would have wanted. Your estate goes through probate, which is public, time-consuming, and expensive. If you have minor children, the court will also appoint a guardian without any input from you. A simple estate plan solves all of that.

Yes. Even modest estates need planning. In Walnut Creek and the surrounding East Bay area, home values alone often push estates above California’s probate limits. Beyond that, estate planning isn’t just about money. It’s about naming the right people to make decisions, protecting young children, and making things easier for your family during an already difficult time. Anyone with a home, bank accounts, or kids needs a plan.

Absolutely, and you should. A trust amendment or trust restatement is a normal part of the process. Life changes: you move, you have a child, a beneficiary passes away, your marriage changes, or your assets shift. Matthew recommends reviewing your plan every three to five years or whenever a major life event happens. Older plans, especially those set up before 2000, often need updating due to changes in California and federal law.

Trust funding is the process of actually transferring your assets into your trust. A trust that’s never funded is essentially just a piece of paper. Your real estate needs to be transferred by deed, your financial accounts need to be retitled, and your beneficiary designations need to be updated. This step is where a lot of DIY trust plans fall apart. Matthew makes sure it gets done right.

Business owners have additional planning considerations that most general estate plans don’t cover. Who takes over the business if you’re incapacitated or pass away? Is there a buy-sell agreement in place? How do your business interests fit into your overall estate? Matthew works with business owners throughout Contra Costa County to build plans that address both the personal and business sides of the picture.

LEGAL DISCLAIMER:

The information on this website is for general information purposes only. Nothing on this site should be taken as legal advice for any individual case or situation. This information is not intended to create, and receipt or viewing does not constitute, in any way an attorney-client relationship. Matthew W. Harris, Esq., LL.M is a California lawyer in good standing with the State Bar of California. Matthew W. Harris is admitted to practice only in California. Mr. Harris is not licensed to practice in any other jurisdiction.