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Ethical Will

Ethical Will

ETHICAL WILL

Written by [Author Name]

[Document Date]

To: [Addressed To]

[Opening Message]

MY VALUES AND GUIDING PRINCIPLES

[Core Values]

MY SPIRITUAL BELIEFS AND PHILOSOPHY

[Spiritual Beliefs]

WHAT LIFE TAUGHT ME

[Life Lessons]

REGRETS AND REFLECTIONS

[Regrets]

OUR FAMILY STORY

[Family History]

TRADITIONS I HOPE YOU WILL CARRY FORWARD

[Family Traditions]

MY HOPES FOR YOU

[Hopes For Loved Ones]

MY GRATITUDE

[Gratitude]

CLOSING

[Closing Message]

Signed: _______________________________ Date: [Document Date]

[Author Name]

Author

________________

Signature

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What Is a Ethical Will?

An Ethical Will in the United States sets out a testator's final wishes for the disposition of property and the appointment of beneficiaries and executors. It directs the distribution of the testator's estate to named beneficiaries upon death.

The practice of writing ethical wills has deep roots in Jewish tradition, where it is known as a tzava'ah — an ethical testament or bequest — with examples dating from the rabbinic period through medieval Europe to the present day. The Epistle of Maimonides and the ethical will of Judah ibn Tibbon (12th century) are among the earliest surviving examples, offering guidance on Torah study, family relationships, and moral conduct. Parallel traditions exist in Islamic, Christian, Confucian, and Indigenous cultures, reflecting a universal human impulse to transmit earned wisdom across generations.

In contemporary US estate planning practice, the ethical will is recognized by the American Bar Association's Real Property, Trust and Estate Law Section and the National Association of Estate Planners and Councils as a valuable component of complete legacy planning. Estate planning attorneys and financial advisors increasingly recommend that clients prepare an ethical will alongside their legal will, revocable living trust, durable power of attorney, health care directive, and letter of instruction — treating the transmission of values and wisdom as equally important to the transfer of financial assets.

Because an ethical will is not a legal document, it is not subject to the Statute of Wills (requiring witnesses and notarization), the requirements for testamentary capacity, or the formalities that govern living trusts and powers of attorney. A person of any age with any level of legal capacity can write an ethical will. The document need not be witnessed, notarized, or filed with any court or government agency. It can take any format — a letter, a narrative essay, a recorded video, an illustrated printed book, or a digital document — and can be shared with the intended recipients during the writer's lifetime or preserved for delivery after death.

The ethical will is fundamentally different from the letter of instruction — which is a practical document providing executors with information about document locations, professional advisors, and funeral preferences — in that it is directed at the heart rather than the administration of the estate. Where the letter of instruction addresses logistics, the ethical will addresses meaning: the stories that shaped the writer's character, the principles that guided their decisions, and the hopes they hold for the people they love.

When Do You Need a Ethical Will?

An Ethical Will serves no legally mandatory function but is most meaningfully written at specific life stages and transitions when the impulse to reflect and transmit personal legacy is strongest.

Estate planning completion is one of the most common triggers. When a person has completed a legal will, revocable trust, and health care directive, they have addressed the legal and financial dimensions of their legacy — but the most enduring parts of a person's legacy are their values, stories, and wisdom. Estate planning attorneys at firms including Perkins Coie, Greenberg Traurig, and independent boutique practices increasingly encourage clients to write an ethical will as the final step in a complete estate plan, often providing prompts and guidance as part of the planning process.

Serious illness or life-limiting diagnosis creates an urgent awareness of what has not yet been said or shared. Palliative care providers, hospice social workers, and life review therapists at institutions including Memorial Sloan Kettering, Mayo Clinic, and Kaiser Permanente use guided ethical will exercises as part of dignity therapy — a structured process for helping patients with terminal illness find meaning, record their life story, and prepare legacy documents for their families. Research published in the Journal of Palliative Medicine has found that dignity therapy and legacy document preparation are associated with improved psychological well-being in patients with life-limiting illness.

Retirement transitions prompt reflection on a life's work and on what one wants to pass forward. The transition from active professional life to retirement — especially for individuals who have built businesses, practiced medicine, served in public office, or dedicated careers to a cause — creates a natural moment for examining what was accomplished, what was learned, and what values should outlast the career.

Family milestones — the birth of grandchildren, a child's wedding, a family member's graduation — create occasions when legacy letters addressed to specific recipients at specific life moments are most meaningful. A grandparent who writes a letter to a newborn grandchild, to be read on the child's 18th or 21st birthday, creates a connection that transcends the grandparent's physical presence.

Anniversaries of loss — the death of a spouse, a parent, or a child — often prompt survivors to reflect on what they want to be remembered for and what they have learned from grief about what matters most. Writing an ethical will in the aftermath of significant loss can be a therapeutic practice that converts private grief into lasting gift.

What to Include in Your Ethical Will

An Ethical Will has no mandatory legal structure, but documents that achieve their purpose of transmitting meaningful legacy typically address several core themes with specificity and personal voice.

Opening statement and intended recipients sets the context for the document — who is writing it, to whom it is addressed, and the spirit in which it is offered. The opening should be warm, direct, and personal rather than formal. It might acknowledge the occasion on which the letter is being written (completing an estate plan, facing illness, marking a significant birthday), express gratitude for the opportunity to reflect, and invite the recipient to read it in whatever circumstances feel right.

Core values and guiding principles — the beliefs and standards that have governed the writer's major decisions — form the ethical heart of the document. Rather than listing abstract values (honesty, family, faith), effective ethical wills ground each value in a specific story or memory that illustrates how the value was lived. 'I believe in the dignity of honest work' becomes far more powerful when accompanied by the story of a parent who worked two jobs without complaint, or a moment when telling the truth cost something significant.

Life lessons and accumulated wisdom represent what the writer has learned from experience — particularly from failure, loss, and difficulty, which teach differently than success. The most memorable sections of ethical wills are often those where the writer reflects honestly on mistakes made, what they wish they had done differently, and what those experiences revealed about what matters. Authentic acknowledgment of imperfection is more instructive and more credible than accounts of unbroken success.

Family history and stories to be preserved are an irreplaceable component of ethical wills, because the writer is often the last living custodian of specific memories and family knowledge. Where did the family come from? What hardships did earlier generations endure? What traditions were meaningful and why? What names, relationships, and stories would otherwise be lost? The ethical will is one of the few documents that can preserve this oral and relational history in written form.

Messages to specific family members and loved ones — personalized sections addressed to a spouse, child, sibling, or close friend — are among the most emotionally powerful elements. These sections should say what the writer most wants that person to know: what their relationship has meant, what the writer sees in them, what they hope for their future. They should include expressions of love and gratitude that are often left unsaid in the ordinary rhythm of daily life.

Spiritual or philosophical beliefs — the writer's understanding of meaning, purpose, and what, if anything, lies beyond death — are optional but often central to the document's deeper resonance. Whether the writer's beliefs are rooted in a specific religious tradition, a personal spiritual practice, or a secular philosophy of life, articulating them creates an opportunity for the reader to understand the framework through which the writer made sense of life's challenges and gifts.

Hopes and wishes for recipients and the world complete the forward-looking dimension of the document. The ethical will looks both backward — at the life lived — and forward — at the life the reader is living or will live. Expressing specific hopes for a child's courage, a grandchild's curiosity, or a nation's justice gives the document its character as a living wish rather than a backward-looking memorial.

Date, signature, and storage instructions close the document. Even though the ethical will has no legal formalities, dating it creates a record of when it was written and allows the writer to revise and re-date it over time. Storage instructions should be included in the letter of instruction, directing executors to distribute the ethical will to named recipients as directed.

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Reference this free template in an article, syllabus, or research note:

APA

Forms Legal. (2026). Ethical Will (United States) [Legal document template]. Forms Legal. https://forms-legal.com/usa/estate-planning/wills/ethical-will

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BibTeX
@misc{formslegal-ethical-will,
  author       = {{Forms Legal}},
  title        = {Ethical Will (United States)},
  year         = {2026},
  howpublished = {\url{https://forms-legal.com/usa/estate-planning/wills/ethical-will}},
  note         = {Free legal document template. Based on Uniform Probate Code}
}

Frequently Asked Questions

Based on Uniform Probate Code — Template last modified June 2026

This template is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws vary by jurisdiction and change over time. Consult a qualified attorney for advice specific to your situation.Full disclaimer

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