
Moving to a new state comes with obvious tasks. You update your driver’s license. You register to vote. You change your mailing address.
What many people forget is this: your estate plan does not automatically update when you cross state lines.
If you move between Alabama and Florida, or own property in both states, your existing will, trust, powers of attorney, and beneficiary designations may still be valid. But that does not mean they are optimized for where you live now.
Here is what to consider.
Are Your Documents Still Legally Valid?
In most cases, a trust that was properly executed in one state is recognized in another. The same is often true for wills, but probating a “foreign” will, as the law calls it, can make probate more complicated, time consuming, and expensive.
However, powers of attorney and health care directives are more state-specific and may not be honored. Hospitals, banks, and financial institutions are more comfortable with documents drafted under their own state’s law. If something happens and your family needs to use those documents quickly, you do not want delays because an institution is questioning unfamiliar language.
Even small differences in statutory wording can create hesitation.
Updating your documents after a move reduces that risk.
Probate Works Differently in Alabama and Florida
If you own property in the state where you live, probate will be governed by that state’s law.
If you own real estate in two states, your estate may be required to go through probate in both states. This is called ancillary probate. It adds cost, time, and complexity.
For example:
- An Alabama resident who owns a Florida condo may trigger a Florida probate proceeding for that property.
- A Florida resident who keeps inherited land in Alabama may face probate in Alabama even if everything else is handled in Florida.
Planning strategies that worked well in one state may need adjustment in another.
Homestead Rules Matter
Florida has particularly strong homestead protections. They affect:
- Creditor protection
- Property tax treatment
- How property can pass to a surviving spouse or minor child
Alabama has homestead protections too, but the rules are structured differently and provide different levels of exemption.
If your will or trust distributes your primary residence without considering Florida homestead restrictions, it could unintentionally conflict with state law.
When you move, your primary residence changes. Your plan should reflect that.
Tax Differences
Florida has no state income tax. Alabama does.
Neither state currently imposes a state-level estate tax. However, income tax considerations during trust administration and estate settlement can differ depending on residency.
Where you are considered a resident at death can affect how certain assets are reported and administered.
If you split time between states, clarity about domicile becomes important.
Beneficiary Designations and Titling
Retirement accounts, life insurance policies, and transfer-on-death designations pass outside of your will.
When you move, you may:
- Open new financial accounts
- Change banks
- Refinance property
- Retitle real estate
Each of those actions creates an opportunity for inconsistency. It is surprisingly common for beneficiary designations to conflict with an older will or trust.
A move is a natural time to review how everything lines up.
Who Is Serving in Key Roles?
After relocating, your chosen:
- Personal representative
- Trustee
- Agent under power of attorney
- Health care surrogate
may live far away.
That does not automatically disqualify them, but practical considerations matter. Florida, for example, has residency rules for personal representatives that can limit who may serve if they are not related to you.
Distance can also make it harder for someone to manage court filings, property access, or medical decisions quickly.
Do You Intend to Change Your Domicile?
There is a difference between owning property in a state and legally changing your domicile.
Your domicile affects:
- Probate jurisdiction
- State income tax
- Certain creditor protections
- Court authority
If you consider Florida your permanent home but still maintain ties to Alabama, your estate plan should reflect that clearly.
Ambiguity about residency can create confusion at exactly the wrong time.
A Move Is a Natural Review Point
Estate planning is not something you do once and forget.
Major life changes are natural checkpoints:
- Marriage or divorce
- Birth of a child
- Significant financial change
- Retirement
- Relocation to another state
Moving between Alabama and Florida is more than a change of address. It is a change in legal environment.
Most of the time, your existing documents are not “wrong.” They simply may not be aligned with your current state’s rules and opportunities.
Updating your plan after a move is less about starting over and more about making sure your intentions still function the way you expect.
When Guidance Can Help
If you have recently moved to Alabama or Florida, or if you divide your time between the two, reviewing your estate plan is a practical step.
Heircraft Planning works with individuals and families across both states to evaluate existing plans and update them when needed so they reflect current law, current residency, and current goals.
If you would like clarity about how your move affects your estate plan, we welcome you to contact our office to begin that conversation.
