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North Carolina Estate Planning Attorney

Estate Planning Attorney in Matthews, NC

Helping Matthews families finish wills, trusts, and powers of attorney by Zoom — on your schedule, at a flat fee you know upfront.

NC Licensed Attorney Flat-Fee Pricing ★ 5.0 Google Rating 100% Virtual • Zoom Consultations
Why Matthews Families Need an Estate Plan

Protecting your family starts with the right documents

If you live in Matthews and die without a will — legally “intestate” — North Carolina law decides who inherits, who raises your children, and who manages your affairs. That choice belongs to the state unless you make it yourself.

A working Matthews plan usually combines four documents: a Last Will and Testament, a Durable Power of Attorney, a Healthcare Power of Attorney, and a Living Will. Households with real estate, blended families, or minor children often add a Revocable Living Trust to keep the estate out of Mecklenburg County probate.

Ryan P. Duffy works with Matthews families entirely by Zoom — documents drafted, reviewed, and signed under Remote Online Notarization. Flat fees, no hourly billing, no office visits.

NC intestacy: Under N.C.G.S. Chapter 29 the surviving spouse does not automatically inherit everything in North Carolina — when there are children, the spouse shares with them under a statutory formula. The plan-by-default is almost never the plan the family would have chosen.

Matthews, North Carolina
Proudly serving Matthews, NC
About Matthews

Estate planning for Matthews residents

Family-focused Charlotte suburb with its own identity

Matthews has grown from a small railroad town into one of Charlotte's most family-oriented suburbs. The combination of strong public schools, walkable historic downtown, and direct access to Charlotte's job market — without Charlotte's density — has drawn dual-career families, executives, and growing professionals to Matthews and nearby Stallings, Indian Trail, and Weddington.

The Matthews estate planning client base reflects this: growing families with young children who need guardian designations and testamentary trust provisions, dual-income households with retirement accounts at both spouses' employers, Charlotte-commuting professionals with equity compensation, and long-time Matthews families with multi-generational property. Because Matthews is in Mecklenburg County, the same probate dynamics apply as Charlotte proper — meaning trust-based planning offers the same advantages.

Local Estate Planning Scenarios

Common situations we see in Matthews

Estate planning needs are not generic. These are the specific scenarios Matthews clients bring to us — and how a well-drafted plan answers each one.

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Growing Families with Young Children
Guardian designations, testamentary trusts for minor beneficiaries, 529 plan coordination, and life insurance beneficiary structuring are the foundational planning needs for Matthews families.
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Charlotte-Commuting Professionals
Matthews residents working in Charlotte (banking, law, healthcare) often have equity compensation and retirement accounts that need trust-based coordination — same as their Charlotte-residing counterparts.
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Long-Time Matthews Families
Multi-generational property holdings in Matthews and surrounding Union County edges benefit from trust-based ownership to preserve family property without triggering Mecklenburg County probate at each death.
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Dual-Income Households
Two-career Matthews families typically have retirement accounts at both employers, life insurance through both jobs, and need coordinated beneficiary planning across both spouses' assets.
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Estate Planning for Mecklenburg Probate
Matthews falls under Mecklenburg County probate — the busiest in NC. The probate process delays and costs that affect Charlotte estates affect Matthews estates identically, making trust-based planning particularly valuable.
Neighborhoods We Serve

Matthews neighborhoods and communities

Ryan serves clients across Matthews and Mecklenburg County — all virtually, with no office visit required.

Downtown / Historic Matthews Walkable, small-town character, professionals
Crews Crossing Newer family neighborhoods
Stallings (adjacent) Growing families, Union County edge
Indian Trail (adjacent) Family suburbs, mid-range homes
Weddington (adjacent) High-value family neighborhoods, Union County
Mint Hill (adjacent) Suburban families, growing area
Sardis Crossing Family neighborhoods, growing
Brightwalk Park Newer family homes
Matthews Plantation Established family neighborhood
Hood Road corridor Growing residential, family-oriented
Providence Plantation Established neighborhood, professional families
Idlewild South Newer family neighborhoods, growing area
North Carolina Estate Planning Law

North Carolina requirements every Matthews resident should know

North Carolina recognizes attested wills under N.C.G.S. § 31-3.3 (in writing, signed, two witnesses) and holographic wills, though holographic wills are easier to contest. A self-proving affidavit under N.C.G.S. § 31-11.6 lets the Mecklenburg clerk admit the will without later witness testimony. Powers of attorney follow the NC Uniform Power of Attorney Act (Chapter 32C); healthcare directives follow the Natural Death Act (N.C.G.S. Chapter 90). Revocable living trusts are governed by the NC Uniform Trust Code (Chapter 36C) and bypass Mecklenburg County Clerk of Superior Court if properly funded.

For citations and the full statutory framework, see the North Carolina estate planning guide.

Matthews — Local Considerations

Soccer-Mom Estate Planning: 529s, Schools, and the Mistakes Mecklenburg Families Make

Matthews families running the carpool circuit between Elizabeth Lane Elementary, Crown Point, and Weddington Athletic Association tend to delay estate planning until something forces the conversation — a refinance, a death in an extended family, a friend’s divorce. The result is a predictable set of gaps. The good news is that a Mecklenburg-suburb family with two working parents, two or three school-age kids, a 401(k), a 529, and a house typically needs five documents, not fifty.

The Five Documents Most Matthews Families Actually Need

  • Wills with testamentary trusts for minor children. The trust should run to a defined age (often 25 or 30) with staged distributions, not lump sums at 18 under N.C.G.S. § 32C-1-102.
  • Durable powers of attorney under the North Carolina Uniform Power of Attorney Act, N.C.G.S. Chapter 32C, granting financial authority with explicit gifting powers if the family expects to do annual exclusion gifting.
  • Health care powers of attorney under N.C.G.S. § 32A-15 et seq., with HIPAA authorizations that name the same agent.
  • Guardianship designations for minor children. Under N.C.G.S. § 35A-1224, parents can nominate a guardian by will; the clerk of superior court is required to give that nomination substantial weight.
  • Beneficiary designations on every retirement account, life insurance policy, and 529. These pass outside the will entirely, and a mismatch between will and beneficiary form is the single most common drafting failure we see.

The 529 Trap

North Carolina’s NC 529 Plan and other state-sponsored 529s name an account owner and a beneficiary, but the account itself does not pass to a successor automatically. If a Matthews parent dies without naming a successor owner, the account ends up in the probate estate and the surviving parent loses control over investment elections and beneficiary changes until the estate is administered. Every 529 account should have a successor owner on file with the plan administrator, and the will should reference the 529 as a non-probate asset so the executor knows not to claim it.

Common Mistakes

Three errors come up almost every week in suburban Charlotte intake meetings. First, families name a single guardian for the children but a different person as financial trustee, then never tell either of them. Second, they sign a power of attorney form printed from the internet that lacks gifting powers, then discover during a Medicaid crisis that the agent cannot transfer assets without a court order under N.C.G.S. § 35A-1202. Third, they assume that joint accounts “with right of survivorship” under N.C.G.S. § 41-2.1 will solve everything — until one spouse loses capacity and the joint account does not authorize the other to manage retirement or solely titled assets. A one-hour planning conversation prevents all three.

Probate in Mecklenburg County

What happens without an estate plan in Matthews

Understanding the local probate process is one of the strongest reasons to plan ahead.

A Matthews resident who dies without a funded living trust ends up in front of the Mecklenburg County Clerk of Superior Court. NC executors have 60 days to file the will (N.C.G.S. § 28A-2A-1), and creditor notice runs for the period set by N.C.G.S. § 28A-14-1. Total time: typically 6–18 months, public record, supervised by the court.

⚖ Mecklenburg County Probate — Key Facts

  • Court: Mecklenburg County Clerk of Superior Court
  • Address: 832 East 4th Street, Charlotte, NC 28202
  • Filing fee: A $120 floor plus a percentage of estate value (N.C.G.S. § 7A-307), payable to the clerk
  • Process: Chapter 28A controls: qualification of an executor or administrator, asset inventory within 90 days, statutory creditor notice, then a final accounting
  • How to avoid it: A funded revocable trust avoids the whole process; beneficiary designations and TOD deeds handle pieces individually if a trust is overkill for the situation
  • Mecklenburg County Courthouse: 832 E 4th St, Charlotte — Matthews estate matters are handled by the same clerk's office that handles all Mecklenburg County estates
  • Volume Impact: Mecklenburg's high volume affects Matthews estates equally — routine matters often take 4–6 weeks longer than smaller adjacent counties
  • Trust Advantage: A properly funded trust avoids Mecklenburg probate entirely — particularly valuable for Matthews families with both NC and SC ties

A funded revocable trust avoids Mecklenburg County Clerk of Superior Court entirely. Ryan drafts under North Carolina trust law — including the fiduciary standards at N.C.G.S. §§ 36C-8-802 and 36C-8-804 — and walks every Matthews client through funding, which is the step most lawyers skip and the only step that actually determines whether probate is avoided.

The Process

How Matthews families complete their estate plan

Three steps to a signed North Carolina estate plan — usually completed in under three weeks.

1

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.

2

Documents Drafted

Customized will, trust, and powers of attorney — compliant with North Carolina law and matched to the family situation, not a generic form.

3

Remote Signing

A Zoom review, then RON signing with a commissioned NC electronic notary. The signed PDFs are the executed originals.

Ryan P. Duffy, Matthews Estate Planning Attorney
Your Attorney

Ryan P. Duffy, Esq.

Founder • Estate Planning of the Carolinas • NC Licensed

No paralegal queue, no associate ladder — Matthews clients work directly with Ryan, an NC-licensed estate planning attorney, on every step of the engagement.

Licensed — North Carolina State Bar
Licensed — South Carolina State Bar
500+ estate plans completed
5.0 Google Rating • Verified Reviews
Remote Online Notarization Certified
Meet Ryan →
Common Questions

Estate planning FAQ for Matthews, NC

No — Matthews is in Mecklenburg County, so all Matthews estate matters are handled by the Mecklenburg County Clerk of Superior Court in downtown Charlotte. The same probate dynamics, processing times, and procedural requirements apply. The slow Mecklenburg processing times that affect Charlotte estates affect Matthews estates equally, which is why trust-based planning offers the same advantages.
Matthews has one of the highest concentrations of families with young children in the Charlotte metro. The foundational planning need: a will with a clear guardian designation, testamentary trust provisions that hold a minor child's inheritance until a reasonable age (often staggered: 1/3 at 25, 1/3 at 30, remainder at 35), and coordinated life insurance and retirement account beneficiary designations. Ryan walks every young-family Matthews client through this structure.
Generally no — your residence (Matthews) governs your estate plan, regardless of where you work. The exception: if you work in Charlotte and your retirement plan is administered by a Charlotte-based employer with multi-state participants, beneficiary designation rules may have specific quirks to coordinate with your overall plan. Ryan handles this coordination as part of any Matthews professional engagement.
Most Matthews clients finish in 2–3 weeks: free consultation (30–60 min) → drafting (5–10 business days) → Zoom review → Remote Online Notarization signing. Expedited turnaround is available for surgery, travel, or other deadlines.
Yes — licensed by the North Carolina State Bar and the South Carolina State Bar. Membership and standing are public records at ncbar.gov.
Also Serving

North Carolina areas near Matthews

All-NC coverage, by Zoom. Other communities near Matthews that Ryan works with regularly:

A Matthews 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.

Takes 2 minutes · No commitment · Serving all of North Carolina