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North Carolina Estate Planning Law: The Complete Attorney’s Guide

Published: May 13, 2026

TL;DR — North Carolina Estate Planning

North Carolina estate planning is governed primarily by the General Statutes — Chapter 28A (probate and estate administration), Chapter 29 (intestate succession), Chapter 31 (wills), Chapter 32A (healthcare POA & living wills), Chapter 32C (durable financial POA, the NC Uniform Power of Attorney Act), and Chapter 36C (the NC Uniform Trust Code). NC has no state estate tax (repealed effective January 1, 2013) and no state inheritance tax. Remote online notarization for wills, trusts, and POAs became permanent under S.L. 2022-54, effective July 1, 2023. The Clerk of Superior Court in the decedent’s county of domicile sits as the probate court under N.C.G.S. § 28A-2-1, supervising executors through a 90-day inventory, annual accountings, and a final discharge. A surviving spouse has a statutory elective share of 15%–50% of the decedent’s total net assets, scaled by length of marriage (N.C.G.S. §§ 30-3.1 to 30-3.7). A routine NC estate closes in roughly 6–12 months.

This guide is written for North Carolina residents who want to understand the statutory framework before sitting down to draft a will, trust, or power of attorney. It is not a substitute for legal advice — but if you’ve ever wondered where exactly the rule about a spouse’s share comes from, or how long a creditor has to file against an NC estate, this page is the answer. Every section ties back to the General Statutes by citation. If you want the short version of how I work, see the attorney page or book a free consultation.

Intestate succession in North Carolina (N.C.G.S. Chapter 29)

If a North Carolina resident dies without a valid will, the Intestate Succession Act in Chapter 29 of the General Statutes decides who inherits — and it does not always match what families assume. The default rules turn on whether the decedent left a surviving spouse, descendants (children, grandchildren), or parents, and they treat real property differently from personal property.

Spouse only, no descendants or parents

If the decedent leaves a surviving spouse and no surviving children, grandchildren, or parents, the spouse takes the entire estate — both real and personal property. Spouses often assume this is the universal rule. It is not.

Spouse plus one child (or one child’s descendants)

The surviving spouse takes a one-half undivided interest in the decedent’s real property and the first $60,000 of personal property plus one-half of the remaining personal property. The child (or the child’s lineal descendants, by representation) takes the other half of the real property and the balance of the personal property. The “first $60,000” figure for personal property is set by statute and is one of the most-overlooked features of NC intestacy.

Spouse plus two or more children

The surviving spouse takes a one-third undivided interest in the real property and the first $60,000 of personal property plus one-third of the remaining personal property. The children (or their lineal descendants) divide the remaining two-thirds of the real property and two-thirds of the remaining personal property. The spouse’s real-property share drops from one-half to one-third the moment there is more than one child surviving (or more than one line of descent).

Spouse plus surviving parent, no descendants

If the decedent leaves a surviving spouse and one or both parents but no descendants, the surviving spouse takes a one-half undivided interest in the real property and the first $100,000 of personal property plus one-half of the remaining personal property. The parents take the balance. The threshold here ($100,000) is different from the spouse-and-children threshold ($60,000) — another statutory detail people miss.

No surviving spouse

Where there is no surviving spouse, the estate descends in this order: to the decedent’s children (or their lineal descendants by representation); if none, to the decedent’s parents; if none, to the decedent’s siblings (or their descendants by representation); if none, to grandparents; if none, to aunts and uncles or their descendants. Chapter 29 contains explicit per-stirpes rules and an “escheat to the State” backstop when no statutory taker can be identified.

Wills under N.C.G.S. Chapter 31

Chapter 31 of the General Statutes sets the formal requirements for executing a valid will in North Carolina, recognizes holographic wills, and provides the self-proving affidavit procedure that streamlines later probate.

Formal (attested) wills — N.C.G.S. § 31-3.3

An attested written will is valid in NC if it is (1) signed by the testator (or by another in the testator’s presence and at the testator’s direction), and (2) attested by at least two competent witnesses, each of whom signs in the presence of the testator. The testator does not have to sign in the witnesses’ presence — but the testator must either sign in their presence or acknowledge their signature to them. The will should also be in writing (Chapter 31 does not recognize oral or “nuncupative” wills except in narrow military/maritime contexts, and even those are extremely limited).

Holographic wills — N.C.G.S. § 31-3.4

NC recognizes holographic wills — wills written entirely in the testator’s own handwriting and signed by the testator — even without witnesses. The instrument must be (a) written entirely in the handwriting of the testator, (b) subscribed by the testator (or with the testator’s name written in or on the will in their handwriting), and (c) found after the testator’s death among the testator’s valuable papers or in the custody of a person designated by the testator for safekeeping. Holographic wills are admitted to probate by proof of three witnesses who can authenticate the handwriting. They are an emergency tool, not a planning tool — they create proof problems for the family.

Self-proving affidavit — N.C.G.S. § 31-11.6

A North Carolina will can be made “self-proving” by attaching an affidavit of the testator and witnesses sworn before a notary public. When a will is self-proved, the Clerk of Superior Court can admit it to probate without separately taking the witnesses’ testimony. Every will I draft includes a self-proving affidavit. It saves the family weeks during probate.

Revocation

A NC will can be revoked by a subsequent writing executed with the same formalities, or by physical act (burning, tearing, canceling, obliterating, or destroying) with the intent to revoke. Marriage and divorce after execution have specific statutory effects on a will under Chapter 31 — divorce, for example, generally revokes provisions in favor of the former spouse by operation of law.

Revocable living trusts under the NC Uniform Trust Code (Chapter 36C)

North Carolina adopted the Uniform Trust Code as Chapter 36C of the General Statutes. The NCUTC governs creation, modification, administration, and termination of trusts. The most common estate planning trust I draft is the revocable living trust.

Creation — N.C.G.S. § 36C-4-401

A trust is created when a settlor with capacity transfers property to a trustee (or declares themselves trustee), identifies a definite beneficiary (or a charitable purpose), and imposes duties on the trustee that the trustee can be compelled to perform. The statute does not require a particular form — but a writing signed by the settlor is essentially universal in practice, and a writing is required to hold real property in trust under the Statute of Frauds.

Funding the trust

A trust does nothing until it is funded — that is, until assets are retitled into the name of the trustee. For real property in NC, this is done by deed (typically a general warranty deed or non-warranty deed) recorded in the Register of Deeds for the county where the property sits. For bank and brokerage accounts, retitling is done through the institution. For tangible personal property, an assignment of personal property attached to the trust is the usual vehicle. Unfunded trusts are the single most common drafting failure I see when reviewing an existing plan.

Amendment and revocation — N.C.G.S. § 36C-6-602

Under the NCUTC, a trust is revocable unless its terms expressly provide otherwise — this default rule reverses the older common-law presumption. The settlor of a revocable trust retains the power to amend or revoke during life, and on the death of the settlor the trust typically becomes irrevocable as to that share. Section 36C-6-602 sets out the default methods of revocation (substantial compliance with any method stated in the trust, or by writing other than a will manifesting clear and convincing intent).

Settlor powers and reservation of control

The NCUTC permits the settlor of a revocable trust to retain broad powers — including the power to act as sole trustee, to draw income and principal at will, and to amend, restate, or revoke at any time. Those reserved powers are why a revocable living trust does not provide creditor protection or tax shelter during the settlor’s lifetime; the trade-off is full lifetime control and a private, probate-avoiding transfer at death.

Powers of attorney under the NC Uniform Power of Attorney Act (Chapter 32C)

In 2018 North Carolina replaced its older POA statutes with the Uniform Power of Attorney Act, now codified as Chapter 32C. The Act standardizes durable financial powers of attorney, provides a statutory short-form, and clarifies third-party reliance and agent duties.

Durable financial POA — N.C.G.S. § 32C-1-105

Under Chapter 32C, a financial power of attorney is presumed durable — that is, it survives the principal’s incapacity — unless the document expressly provides otherwise. This reverses the older rule (under which a POA was non-durable unless it said the magic words). A 32C POA must be signed by the principal (or by another in the principal’s presence at their direction) and acknowledged before a notary public.

Statutory short-form POA

Chapter 32C includes a statutory short-form power of attorney with optional grants of authority across categories (real property, tangible personal property, banks, retirement plans, taxes, gifts, etc.). Granting “hot powers” — gifting, creating or amending a trust, changing beneficiary designations — requires an express grant; the statute does not let them ride in on a general grant.

Healthcare POA — Chapter 32A

Healthcare powers of attorney in NC remain governed by Chapter 32A, not 32C. A healthcare POA authorizes a named agent to make medical decisions for the principal when the principal lacks capacity, and is typically paired with a living will (advance directive for a natural death). Chapter 32A contains a statutory healthcare POA form that I use as the base for every plan.

Advance directives and living wills

NC’s living will statute is N.C.G.S. § 32A-15 et seq. — the “Advance Directive for a Natural Death” article. A living will lets a competent adult declare, in advance, that life-prolonging measures should be withheld or withdrawn in defined end-of-life conditions (typically incurable, irreversible condition with imminent death; persistent vegetative state; or advanced dementia with no reasonable hope of recovery). Execution requires two qualified witnesses and a notary. The statute provides a recommended form. See our page on living wills for the document-level walkthrough.

Probate in North Carolina (Chapter 28A)

Probate in North Carolina is administered by the Clerk of Superior Court of the county where the decedent was domiciled at death, sitting as the ex officio judge of probate. Chapter 28A of the General Statutes is the controlling framework.

Opening the estate and qualifying the personal representative

The personal representative (executor named in the will, or administrator appointed by the Clerk if there is no will) qualifies by filing an application, taking the oath, and posting bond (waivable in most cases when the will so provides). Letters Testamentary or Letters of Administration issue. From that point forward, the personal representative owes fiduciary duties to the estate and its beneficiaries.

Notice to creditors and the claims period

Under Chapter 28A, the personal representative must publish a notice to creditors in a newspaper of general circulation in the county once a week for four consecutive weeks, and mail or deliver actual notice to known or reasonably ascertainable creditors. Creditors then have three months from the first publication (or 90 days from actual mailed notice, whichever is later) to present claims. Claims filed late are barred. This statutory cutoff is one of the most important deadlines in NC probate.

Inventory and accounting timelines

The personal representative must file a 90-day inventory listing all probate assets at date-of-death values, and then file annual accountings until the estate is closed. The final account closes the estate. Each filing is reviewed by the Clerk’s office. Most NC estates I see close in 9–18 months, but complex estates (litigation, hard-to-value assets, contested claims) can take significantly longer.

Small-estate procedures

Chapter 28A also provides summary procedures for small estates — collection of personal property by affidavit for very small estates and summary administration for spouse-as-sole-beneficiary cases. See our probate overview for the threshold figures and procedural details.

Estate and inheritance taxes in North Carolina

North Carolina has no state estate tax and no inheritance tax. The NC estate tax was repealed effective January 1, 2013 (it had been linked to the federal state death tax credit, which itself was phased out). The only “death tax” that touches a NC estate is the federal estate tax, which applies only to estates exceeding the federal basic exclusion amount (currently in the multi-million-dollar range and indexed annually). For the overwhelming majority of NC families, no federal estate tax return is required, and only an informational closing document is filed at the state level if applicable. Confirm current federal exemption figures with the IRS or your CPA — the number changes.

Remote online notarization in North Carolina

Remote online notarization (RON) became permanent in North Carolina under Session Law 2022-54, with the operative provisions of the permanent RON act taking effect July 1, 2023. The act authorizes a NC commissioned electronic notary to perform notarizations via two-way audio-video for principals located anywhere, with identity proofing, credential analysis, and a recorded session. Importantly, the NC RON statute permits remote notarization of wills, codicils, trusts, powers of attorney, healthcare powers of attorney, and advance directives — the categories that matter for estate planning. This is what makes a fully virtual signing appointment possible from your living room. It is also why I can deliver an entire estate plan to a NC client by Zoom without an in-person office visit.

Spousal elective share — N.C.G.S. §§ 30-3.1 to 30-3.7

North Carolina protects a surviving spouse from disinheritance through the elective share statutes in Article 1A of Chapter 30. A surviving spouse of a NC decedent can elect to take a share of the decedent’s “total net assets” (a defined term broader than just the probate estate — it sweeps in many non-probate transfers) instead of taking under the will.

How the percentage is calculated

The elective-share percentage scales with the length of the marriage:

  • Less than 5 years of marriage: 15% of total net assets
  • 5 to less than 10 years: 25%
  • 10 to less than 15 years: 33%
  • 15 years or more: 50%

The election must be made within strict time limits (generally six months from the issuance of letters testamentary or letters of administration). The elective share interacts in detailed ways with non-probate transfers, trusts, beneficiary designations, and pre-/post-marital agreements; planning that ignores it can be unwound after death.

When to consider a trust vs. a will in North Carolina

For many NC families, a properly drafted will plus a durable financial POA and healthcare POA is a complete plan. A revocable living trust adds value when one or more of the following is true:

  • You own real property in more than one state (a trust avoids ancillary probate in the second state).
  • You want privacy — probate filings in NC are public record; trust administration is not.
  • You have a blended family and want to control the order and timing of distributions.
  • You want to avoid Clerk of Superior Court supervision and shorten the time to distribute.
  • You expect challenges and want the higher bar of trust contest standards.

For a side-by-side comparison and pricing, see wills and trusts.

Common mistakes North Carolina residents make

After years of practice in NC, the same five planning failures account for the majority of problems I see in probate. None of them are sophisticated. All of them are avoidable.

  1. Treating the will as the whole plan. Beneficiary designations on retirement accounts, life insurance, and TOD/POD accounts pass outside the will. A perfectly drafted will does nothing for the IRA that names an ex-spouse as primary beneficiary.
  2. Funding the trust on paper, not in fact. Signing a trust document does not move title. The deed, the brokerage retitling, the assignment of personal property — without those, the trust holds nothing and probate runs anyway.
  3. Using an old, pre-Chapter 32C POA without reviewing it. Banks and brokerages routinely reject older POAs that lack express “hot powers” or that pre-date the Uniform Power of Attorney Act. A current 32C statutory short-form solves this.
  4. No healthcare POA paired with the living will. A living will tells the physician what you want in defined end-of-life conditions; a healthcare POA appoints a decision-maker for every other medical decision. You need both.
  5. Ignoring the elective share when leaving assets to non-spouse beneficiaries. A spouse can elect against the will in the first six months after letters issue. Planning around this requires affirmative drafting — usually a pre- or post-marital agreement, or trust structures that fund the elective share intentionally.

Working with Ryan on your North Carolina estate plan

I’m Ryan Duffy. I’m licensed in North Carolina, South Carolina, and New Jersey, and I run a flat-fee, fully virtual estate planning practice from Charlotte. Every plan I draft for a NC resident is built on the statutes above — Chapters 28A, 29, 30, 31, 32A, 32C, and 36C. You can read more on the attorney page or book a free consultation directly. Local pages: Charlotte, Raleigh, Durham, Greensboro, Winston-Salem, Cary, Asheville, Wilmington.

North Carolina estate planning FAQs

No. North Carolina repealed its state estate tax effective January 1, 2013. The only death tax that potentially applies to an NC estate is the federal estate tax, which is owed only by estates above the federal basic exclusion amount.

Yes. Session Law 2022-54, with permanent remote online notarization provisions effective July 1, 2023, authorizes RON for wills, trusts, durable financial powers of attorney, healthcare powers of attorney, and advance directives. A NC commissioned electronic notary uses two-way audio-video, identity proofing, and a recorded session to complete the signing.

The Intestate Succession Act in Chapter 29 controls. Distribution depends on who survives you. A spouse with one child takes one-half of real property and the first $60,000 of personal property plus one-half of the remainder; a spouse with two or more children takes one-third. With no spouse, the estate goes to descendants, then parents, then siblings, then more remote kin, before escheating to the State.

Most NC probate estates close in 9 to 18 months. The personal representative files a 90-day inventory and annual accountings with the Clerk of Superior Court. The creditor claim period runs three months from the first published notice (or 90 days from actual notice to a known creditor). Complex or contested estates take longer.

Yes, under N.C.G.S. § 31-3.4 — but only if the document is written entirely in the testator’s own handwriting, signed by the testator, and found after death among the testator’s valuable papers or in the custody of a person designated for safekeeping. Holographic wills create proof problems and are an emergency tool, not a planning tool.

Under N.C.G.S. §§ 30-3.1 to 30-3.7, a surviving spouse may elect against the will and take a share of the decedent’s total net assets — 15% for marriages under 5 years, 25% for 5 to under 10, 33% for 10 to under 15, and 50% for 15 years or more. The election generally must be filed within six months of issuance of letters.

Yes. A NC living will under § 32A-15 tells physicians what you want in defined end-of-life conditions. A healthcare power of attorney under Chapter 32A appoints a person to make every other medical decision when you cannot. The two documents do different jobs and should be executed together.

Yes — but only for assets that are actually titled in the name of the trust. A trust that is signed but not funded does not avoid probate for the unfunded assets. Funding means retitling real property by recorded deed, retitling accounts with the financial institution, and assigning tangible personal property to the trustee.

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