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Fee Information & Cost Estimates

Last updated February 2026
6 min read
βœ“ Verified Feb. 2026
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What Determines the Cost

It depends on what you need, how complicated the matter is, and how much of the work you can do yourself. Legal fees vary significantly because no two matters are identical, and any estimate without knowing the specifics of your situation would be unreliable. What we can do is give you realistic ranges based on the types of matters we handle every day in Bucks County.

Estate Planning

Estate planning documents are billed at flat fees, you know the price before any work begins. Complexity matters: a straightforward plan for one person with adult children and modest assets costs less than a plan involving blended families, business interests, or special needs beneficiaries.

Individual Documents
Last Will & Testamentfrom $850
Financial Power of Attorneyfrom $300
Healthcare Directive / Living Willfrom $250
Most Popular
Packages
Essentials (Will + Living Will)$1,000
Complete Individual (Will + POA + LW)$1,250
Couples (both spouses, all 3 docs)$2,000

If your situation calls for a revocable living trust, trust-based plans start at $2,500. Trusts involve more drafting, more funding paperwork, and more client education. They're not always necessary. I'll tell you if a trust actually makes sense for your situation or if a well-drafted will accomplishes the same goal. Schedule a consultation to discuss.

⚠ The Cost of Not Planning

A complete estate plan costs $1,250. Dying without one triggers intestacy proceedings, potential guardianship petitions, and family disputes that routinely cost $10,000–$50,000+ to resolve. A $300 power of attorney prevents a $5,000+ guardianship proceeding. Planning is almost always less expensive than the alternative.

Estate Administration (Probate)

Settling an estate involves court filing fees, publication costs, and attorney fees. The court costs alone in Bucks County: probate fee ($50–$725+ depending on estate size) + surcharges ($71.25) + publication ($325.85) + short certificates ($15 each, typically 5 to 6 needed) = roughly $650–$1,250 before attorney fees. Attorney fees for estate administration are typically based on a percentage of the estate's value or an hourly rate:

Simple estates (single beneficiary class, no disputes, straightforward assets): $2,500–$5,000 in attorney fees. Moderate estates (multiple beneficiary classes, real estate to sell, tax returns needed): $5,000–$10,000. Complex estates (business interests, disputes, litigation, multi-state property): $10,000+, often billed hourly at $350–$450/hour.

Pennsylvania inheritance tax is separate and unavoidable: 0% for surviving spouses, 4.5% for lineal descendants (children, grandchildren), 12% for siblings, and 15% for everyone else. That's a tax bill, not an attorney fee, but it's the number that usually shocks people.

Real Estate Transactions

Attorney fees for a residential closing in Bucks County typically run $750–$1,500, depending on complexity. This covers document review, title examination, preparation of the deed and transfer tax forms, and attendance at closing. Recording fees are separate: $82.75 for the deed + $84.75 for the mortgage = $167.50 minimum. If the transaction involves unusual issues (boundary disputes, easement questions, title defects) the attorney fee increases accordingly.

Deed preparation alone (such as transferring property between family members) is generally $500–$1,000 in attorney fees, plus the $82.75 recording fee. But the realty transfer tax on the transfer can dwarf both. Bucks County's total transfer tax rate is 2% of the property's computed value (assessed value Γ— the current CLR factor, 17.06 for July 2025 through June 2026, or sale price, whichever is higher). Many family transfers are exempt from transfer tax, but not all.

Family Law

Family law matters are almost always billed hourly, and the total depends heavily on whether the other side cooperates. The Prothonotary filing fee for a divorce complaint is $398.00; a custody complaint is $281.25 (or $100.25 if filed with the divorce). Filing fees are current as of 2026 and subject to change. Uncontested divorce (mutual consent, agreed property division): $2,500–$5,000 in total attorney fees. Contested divorce with custody and equitable distribution disputes: $10,000–$30,000+. Most attorneys require an upfront retainer of $3,000–$5,000 and bill against it at $350–$450/hour.

Custody modifications (filing fee: $130.00) and support hearings typically cost $2,000–$5,000 each in attorney fees. PFA (Protection From Abuse) matters have no filing fee and are often handled on shorter timelines, attorney fees may run $1,500–$3,500.

Civil Litigation & Business Disputes

Litigation is the most unpredictable category. The Prothonotary filing fee for a civil complaint in Bucks County is $292.75 (as of 2026; subject to change). Attorney fees depend on the stakes and complexity. Small claims matters at the Magisterial District Court level (claims up to $12,000): $1,000–$3,000. Contract disputes and business litigation: $5,000–$50,000+, almost always hourly. Discovery alone can cost $5,000–$15,000 if depositions and expert witnesses are involved.

Ways to Manage Costs

Ask for a fee agreement in writing. Pennsylvania Rule of Professional Conduct 1.5 requires that the basis of the fee be communicated to the client. You should know before hiring an attorney whether you're paying a flat fee, hourly rate, or contingency percentage.

Provide organized information. The biggest driver of attorney fees is time. If you bring documents organized, questions written down, and relevant facts summarized, you'll spend less time (and money) getting your attorney up to speed.

Know what you're paying for. Court filing fees, publication costs, recording fees, and taxes are pass-through costs. They go to the court or government, not the attorney. Ask for an itemized estimate that separates attorney fees from costs.

Don't wait. Legal problems almost always get more expensive the longer you wait. A $1,500 estate plan is cheaper than a $10,000 probate dispute that could have been avoided. A $500 lease review is cheaper than a $15,000 commercial lease dispute.

Marc R. Lynde, Esq. Β· 12+ years as a licensed attorney Β· Cardozo School of Law Β· Licensed in PA & NY Β· Full bio β†’

Frequently Asked Questions

Do you offer free consultations?+
Yes. I offer free initial consultations for most practice areas. I'll listen to your situation, explain your options, give you a realistic sense of cost and timeline, and let you decide how to proceed. You're never obligated to hire me afterward.
What's included in the estate planning flat fee?+
The flat fee covers everything: the initial consultation, document drafting, a review meeting where we go through every provision together, revisions, and the signing ceremony. There are no hidden charges. If your situation turns out to be more complex than a standard plan (blended families, business interests, special needs), I'll quote a specific price before any work begins.
Do you offer payment plans?+
For flat-fee estate planning services, payment is due at signing. For larger matters billed hourly (litigation, contested estates), I require an upfront retainer and bill against it. If cost is a concern, mention it during the consultation. I'd rather work with you to find a solution than have you leave without a plan.
What if my situation is more complicated?+
The published prices are starting points for straightforward matters. Blended families, business succession planning, special needs beneficiaries, irrevocable trusts, and Medicaid planning all require additional work and will be priced accordingly. I'll always give you a specific quote before starting, so there are no surprises.
How do court costs and filing fees work?+
Court filing fees, recording fees, publication costs, and taxes are pass-through costs; they go to the government, not to me. I'll give you an itemized estimate that separates attorney fees from costs so you know exactly where every dollar goes. Current Bucks County fee schedules are available on this site: Register of Wills Β· Recorder of Deeds.
Should I get just a will, or the full package?+
At minimum, every adult needs a will and a healthcare directive (living will). The healthcare directive is the document that tells doctors what you want if you can't speak for yourself; and it names the person who makes medical decisions on your behalf. A financial power of attorney is strongly recommended for anyone with assets, bank accounts, or bills that someone would need to manage if you were incapacitated. Without one, your family would need to petition the Orphans' Court for guardianship: a process that costs $3,000–$5,000+, takes months, and removes your choice of who manages your affairs.

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