1. You enter information
The guided interview asks for estate, family, interested-person, asset, and filing information. During the static beta, case information is saved in this browser unless you download or share a backup file yourself.
2. ProbateStudio organizes the information
The software uses your answers to organize data, check for missing fields, and prepare workflow checklists. It does not decide legal rights, legal obligations, legal strategy, or what a person should do in a specific probate matter.
3. Documents are assembled from your answers
For standard Wisconsin court forms, ProbateStudio is designed to fill blanks and check boxes only. It does not change official court form language, captions, layout, form numbers, revision dates, statutory references, signature blocks, or official instructions.
4. You review before filing
Users remain responsible for reviewing all documents, confirming signatures and dates, checking county or court requirements, handling service or publication, and deciding whether to consult a licensed probate attorney.
What ProbateStudio does not do
- ProbateStudio is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice.
- Using ProbateStudio does not create an attorney-client relationship.
- ProbateStudio does not provide legal representation, legal opinions, legal conclusions, or court filing services.
- ProbateStudio does not promise that any document, packet, checklist, or filing format will be accepted by a court, Register in Probate, agency, financial institution, creditor, newspaper, or other third party.
- ProbateStudio does not replace a licensed attorney.
When attorney help may be important
Consider speaking with a licensed probate attorney if the matter involves disagreement, uncertainty, minors, protected persons, missing people, unknown addresses, deceased children with descendants, public-benefit recovery, creditor pressure, unusual assets, taxes, real estate issues, formal probate, or questions about legal rights.
Beta note
The hosted beta is for testing and feedback. Do not enter Social Security numbers, full financial account numbers, passwords, medical records, or unnecessary private financial details. Do not sign, serve, publish, file, or rely on generated documents until the filer has carefully reviewed the information, signatures, county requirements, and filing steps for the specific matter, and decided whether to consult a licensed attorney.