How Much Does a Will Cost in Ohio?

Quick answer

A simple will in Ohio typically costs $300 to $800 with an attorney, and $0 to $150 online. Two things make Ohio distinctive: it does **not** recognize handwritten (holographic) wills, and it's one of the few states with **no self-proving affidavit**, so your witnesses may have to testify at probate. And a will directs your estate through probate; it doesn't avoid it.

Educational guide — not legal advice. Costs and laws change; confirm current rules with a licensed Ohio attorney before relying on them.

What a will costs in Ohio

How you make it Typical cost in Ohio Best for
Attorney-drafted $300 to $800 Most people; anything with children, property, or blended families
Online will service $0 to $150 Simple estates, clear beneficiaries
Pure DIY / handwritten $0 Rarely the best idea — easy to get wrong

Illustrative Ohio pricing as of 2026 — re-verify with current quotes. Attorney quotes are often for a small package (the will plus financial and healthcare powers of attorney), not the will alone.

A simple will in Ohio is genuinely inexpensive — $300 to $800 with an attorney, and as little as $0 online. The price is low for a reason: a will is a relatively simple document. The cost climbs only when your situation is complicated — minor children and a guardianship decision, a blended family, a business, or potential estate tax.

What makes a will valid in Ohio

An Ohio will must be signed by you and witnessed by two competent people who saw you sign or acknowledge it (R.C. §2107.03).

The witnesses should be disinterested — that is, not people who inherit under the will — so no one can later argue they had a reason to lie about the signing. Get that one detail wrong and the gift to an interested witness (or the whole will) can be challenged.

Can you write your own will by hand in Ohio?

Ohio does not recognize holographic (handwritten, unwitnessed) wills. An Ohio will must be signed by you and by two competent witnesses (R.C. §2107.03).

Even where a handwritten will is legal, it’s the riskiest way to do it: no witnesses means no one to confirm it was really you and that you weren’t pressured, and ambiguous handwriting is a gift to anyone who wants to contest it. A typed, witnessed, self-proved will costs very little and avoids all of that.

The self-proving affidavit (a small step that saves a big headache)

Ohio is one of the few states that does not provide for a self-proving affidavit, so your witnesses may have to be located and testify when the will is probated. Keep your witnesses' contact information current — it matters more in Ohio than almost anywhere else.

Without it, your witnesses may have to be tracked down years later to confirm they watched you sign — which can be impossible if they’ve moved, lost touch, or died. It’s one of the cheapest, highest-value things you can add to a will.

The catch: a will doesn’t avoid probate in Ohio

This is the part the price tag hides. A will is cheap because of what it doesn’t do: it does not avoid probate. A will simply tells the Ohio probate court who should get what and who should run the estate. Everything it covers still goes through probate — the public, months-long, fee-charging court process.

So the real cost of “just a will” isn’t the $0–$1,000 you pay now; it’s the probate your family pays later. To see that number for Ohio, read How Much Does Probate Cost in Ohio?.

Do you need more than a will in Ohio?

For a lot of people, a will is genuinely enough — especially renters, younger families, and anyone whose main assets (retirement accounts, life insurance) already pass by beneficiary designation outside probate.

You may want more than a will if you own a home and want to spare your family probate, value privacy, own property in more than one state, or want a plan for incapacity. That’s where a living trust comes in — it costs more up front but can avoid probate entirely. Compare the two honestly:

How to keep the cost down in Ohio

  • Use a quality online service for a truly simple estate. Several are free; paid ones run $0–$150. Make sure it’s Ohio-specific and includes a self-proving affidavit.
  • Bundle the basics. A will, a financial power of attorney, and a healthcare directive are cheaper together than separately — and the POA and directive matter while you’re alive, which a will never does.
  • Pay for an attorney when it’s not simple. Minor children, a blended family, a business, a special-needs beneficiary, or estate-tax exposure are all worth a real attorney’s time. A cheap will that’s invalid or unclear is the most expensive kind.

The honest takeaway

A will in Ohio costs $300 to $800 with an attorney, or nearly nothing online — and for many people that’s all they need. Just go in clear-eyed about what you’re buying: a will directs your estate through probate; it doesn’t avoid it. If avoiding probate matters to you, price a living trust against what Ohio probate would actually cost your family, and decide from there.

Whatever you choose, sign it correctly with two disinterested witnesses, add the self-proving affidavit where Ohio allows it, and tell your executor where to find it.

Will costs in other states

Compare Ohio with what a will costs in other states:


This page explains will costs and validity rules in Ohio in general terms as of 2026. It is not legal advice; statutes and figures change and depend on your situation. Confirm current rules with a licensed Ohio attorney. Cost figures reflect published 2026 attorney and online-service pricing and should be re-verified with live quotes. Sources: Supreme Court of Ohio (supremecourt.ohio.gov); Ohio R.C. §2107.03 (method of making will).