Witness count, notarization, holographic acceptance, electronic-will status, self-proving affidavit, revocation rules, in-terrorem enforceability, and the cross-state portability rule — pinned to the New York probate code primary statutes.
New York generally requires two witnesses; nuncupative and holographic wills are valid only when made by members of the armed forces during a war or by mariners while at sea, and are invalidated one year after discharge or three years after the will is made (whichever comes later).
State has not adopted UEWA, an Electronic Wills Act, or permanent remote witnessing. COVID-era emergency orders have expired; physical-presence witness requirement applies.
Status: not_adopted
Revocation in New York
Revocation statutes vary state-by-state on the divorce-auto-revocation question. Verify the state's specific revocation-by-operation-of-law statute (often a separate chapter from the will-execution statute).
Pre-filled with New York as both execution and domicile state. Adjust to test cross-state scenarios.
Will validity decoder
Describe an executed will. The engine runs the cross-state portability conditional against the 50-state + DC matrix and returns a verdict with statute pins. All inputs stay in your browser.
Verdict — VALID
VALID under NY probate. The will was executed and remains domiciled in NY, satisfying its will-execution statute with 2 witnesses.
Conformity rule. NY's will-execution statute (UPC §2-502 pattern) requires two competent witnesses; with two attested witnesses the will is valid.