Estate Planning Attorney in Greenville, SC
Flat-fee wills, living trusts, and powers of attorney for Greenville families — 100% virtual, no office visit required.
Protecting your family starts with the right documents
Estate planning for Greenville households is less about templates and more about three questions: who inherits, who acts for you if you can't, and whether Greenville County probate is worth avoiding. A do-nothing default answers all three with South Carolina intestacy — a fixed statutory formula that rarely matches what families actually want.
For most Greenville clients the working set is a will, a durable financial power of attorney, a healthcare power of attorney with a living will, and (when there's real estate, a blended family, or young children) a revocable living trust. Beneficiary forms on retirement accounts and life insurance are coordinated alongside — otherwise the will and the beneficiary form contradict each other.
Ryan handles every Greenville engagement personally, on Zoom, on a flat fee quoted before any work starts. No paralegals, no associates, no in-person trips.
SC intestacy: Without a will the SC Probate Code (Title 62) writes the plan. Spouses share with descendants by a fixed formula at S.C. Code § 62-2-102. Greenville County Probate Court supervises every distribution publicly.
Estate planning for Greenville residents
Greenville is the largest city in Upstate South Carolina — a different SC market from coastal Charleston or Lowcountry Bluffton. The defining estate planning client groups here: BMW Manufacturing employees (the BMW plant in Spartanburg/Greer is BMW's largest in the world, employing thousands of Upstate professionals); Michelin North America (HQ in Greenville) executives; Furman University faculty and staff; Bob Jones University staff; growing tech/innovation corridor professionals (Clemson University's ICAR automotive research center is nearby); and Prisma Health Upstate physicians and healthcare professionals.
Greenville estate planning needs reflect this employer concentration. BMW employees have specific retirement plans, German parent company stock considerations (where applicable), and frequent expat or international assignment complications. Michelin executives often have substantial equity compensation and deferred compensation. Furman faculty participate in SC ORP or have private retirement plans. Prisma Upstate physicians have substantial retirement accounts and physician-specific concerns. The downtown Greenville revitalization has drawn an influx of professionals to walkable downtown neighborhoods, generating estate planning needs for the demographic shift.
Common situations we see in Greenville
Most Greenville families fall into one of these patterns. The drafting answer is different for each.
Greenville neighborhoods and communities
Ryan serves clients across Greenville and Greenville County — all virtually, with no office visit required.
South Carolina requirements every Greenville resident should know
Three statutes drive Greenville planning. Wills: S.C. Code § 62-2-502 (two witnesses; no holographs), with a self-proving affidavit at § 62-2-504. Powers of attorney: the SC Uniform Power of Attorney Act, §§ 62-8-101 et seq. (notary plus two witnesses required). Healthcare directives: the SC Death with Dignity Act, §§ 44-77-10 et seq. (witnesses must be disinterested). A funded revocable trust under § 62-7-401 avoids the Greenville County Probate Court entirely — especially valuable for waterfront and Lowcountry real estate.
Statutory references and case law: South Carolina estate planning guide.
BMW Expatriates, Furman Bequests, and Upstate Research IP
Greenville and the broader Upstate operate as a global manufacturing hub anchored by BMW’s Spartanburg plant, Michelin’s North American headquarters, and the Clemson University International Center for Automotive Research (CU-ICAR). The planning issues are correspondingly international, technical, and increasingly research-driven.
BMW International Assignee Tax and Estate Planning
A meaningful share of BMW Manufacturing’s engineering and management workforce is on multi-year assignment from Germany, Austria, or Mexico, often with split residency, foreign retirement accounts, and family in two countries. Standard South Carolina planning falls short for these households. Key issues include:
- US estate tax exposure for non-domiciliary residents. A non-citizen, non-domiciliary owner of US-situs assets is subject to federal estate tax with only a $60,000 exemption, not the standard exemption available to US citizens and domiciliaries. The US-Germany estate-tax treaty modifies this but requires proper invocation.
- FBAR and Form 8938 disclosure of foreign accounts, including German pension and brokerage accounts, under 31 U.S.C. § 5314 and IRC § 6038D. These disclosures continue after death and become the executor’s obligation.
- Coordination with German Riester and Rürup pensions, which are not US-qualified retirement accounts and receive different beneficiary-designation treatment under both German law and US tax law.
- South Carolina Qualified Domestic Trust (QDOT) planning under IRC § 2056A for a non-citizen surviving spouse, which preserves the marital deduction while deferring estate tax until distributions are made.
Furman and Charitable Bequests
Furman University, its endowment, and affiliated programs receive a steady stream of alumni and donor bequests. South Carolina’s Uniform Prudent Management of Institutional Funds Act, codified at S.C. Code § 34-6-10 et seq., governs how Furman may modify a restricted gift if circumstances change. As with any restricted bequest, the practical recommendation is a separately executed gift agreement during the donor’s lifetime, referenced by the will, rather than embedded restrictions that the institution may struggle to honor decades later.
Clemson Research IP and Faculty Inventors
Faculty at CU-ICAR and Clemson’s engineering departments generate patents, royalty agreements, and equity in spinout companies. Clemson University’s patent policy reserves certain rights to the university, but residual inventor royalties and personal consulting income flow to the faculty member. Three planning steps apply:
- Inventory IP at execution of the estate plan. Many faculty inventors have no list of their issued patents, pending applications, or active license agreements.
- Title royalty streams in a revocable trust under S.C. Code § 62-7-401, with explicit trustee authority to administer ongoing licenses.
- Address consulting LLCs with operating agreements that provide for automatic transfer of membership interests on death, avoiding probate of an active business.
Estate planning services for Greenville families
Every plan is customized to your family, your assets, and South Carolina law — never a one-size-fits-all template.
Will drafting under SC law — structured to clear the Greenville clerk's admission process and survive a will contest.
A funded revocable trust under SC law moves real estate, accounts, and business interests to heirs without Greenville probate supervision.
Durable power of attorney for finances + healthcare power of attorney — the two documents that prevent a court guardianship if you lose capacity.
Living will and healthcare directive drafted under South Carolina law — the document that Greenville hospitals follow when family members disagree.
Document bundles or full plans — Greenville clients see the full cost before signing the engagement letter.
Cryptocurrency, brokerage logins, business accounts, and digital assets — covered under SC law.
What happens without an estate plan in Greenville
Understanding the local probate process is one of the strongest reasons to plan ahead.
In Greenville the probate process is what most people imagine when they hear "estate": the will gets filed with Greenville County Probate Court, a personal representative qualifies under S.C. Code § 62-3-301, creditors are noticed under § 62-3-801, and the court signs off on the final settlement. Public, slow, and exactly the thing a properly funded revocable trust is designed to skip.
⚖ Greenville County Probate — Key Facts
- Court: Greenville County Probate Court
- Address: 301 University Ridge, Greenville, SC 29601
- Filing fee: Scales with estate value per the schedule at S.C. Code § 62-3-720
- Process: Formal or informal administration under Title 62; creditor notice published, supervised distribution, final settlement under S.C. Code § 62-3-1006
- How to avoid it: A trust that actually holds the deed and the brokerage account; TOD/POD designations on liquid accounts; joint titling where appropriate
- Greenville County Probate Court: 301 University Ridge, Greenville — handles all Greenville County estate matters including Greenville, Greer, Travelers Rest, and surrounding communities
- Processing Time: Greenville County probate typically takes 9–13 months for routine estates
- Manufacturing Retirement Coordination: Many Greenville estates involve BMW, Michelin, or other manufacturing retirement plans with specific beneficiary designation requirements
A funded revocable trust avoids Greenville County Probate Court entirely. Ryan drafts under South Carolina trust law — including the fiduciary standards at S.C. Code §§ 62-7-802 and 62-7-804 — and walks every Greenville client through funding, which is the step most lawyers skip and the only step that actually determines whether probate is avoided.
How Greenville families complete their estate plan
Three steps, roughly 2–3 weeks, no office visit.
Intake Call (Free)
A short Zoom call to understand the household, the assets, and the goals. You leave with a clear recommendation and a fixed quote.
Custom Drafting
Ryan personally drafts every document — no paralegal, no template — tailored to the assets and family structure discussed on the intake call.
Remote Signing
A Zoom review, then RON signing with a commissioned SC electronic notary. The signed PDFs are the executed originals.
Ryan P. Duffy, Esq.
Ryan handles every Greenville engagement personally — no paralegals, no associates, no hand-offs. He founded Estate Planning of the Carolinas to make professional planning accessible to South Carolina families through a fully virtual practice.
Estate planning FAQ for Greenville, SC
South Carolina areas near Greenville
All-SC coverage, by Zoom. Other communities near Greenville that Ryan works with regularly:
A Greenville estate plan, finished in three weeks
The first conversation is free and entirely by Zoom. Bring questions, get a quote, decide whether the plan fits.