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Iowa Estate Planning

Get your own affairs in order in Iowa, for yourself or an aging parent. Compare the documents most adults need (a will, a power of attorney, and a healthcare directive), decide whether you need a trust, and see how to keep your estate out of probate.

Which document do I need?

The core documents at a glance. Each row links to its Iowa guide.

Will
Iowa will requirements: full-age and sound-mind capacity, a signed writing, two witnesses who sign together, self-proving affidavits, and no holographic wills. Read the guide
Living trust
How an Iowa revocable living trust avoids probate under the Iowa Trust Code: creating it, funding it, the pour-over will, and what it costs. Read the guide
Power of attorney
Iowa power of attorney rules under Chapter 633B: durable by default, notarized signing, hot powers that need an express grant, and how it ends at death. Read the guide
Healthcare directive
How an Iowa healthcare directive works: a living will declaration under Chapter 144A, a durable power of attorney for health care under Chapter 144B, and IPOST. Read the guide

Not sure what you need in Iowa?

Answer a few questions and we'll tell you which estate planning documents to set up first.

Information current as of 2026-06-18

Settled Estate is not a law firm, and this content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Probate laws and procedures in your state can change. Consult with a qualified attorney for advice specific to your situation. Full disclaimer.