Setting up your estate in Minneapolis? Minnesota's $3M state estate tax exemption catches many families federal law misses.

Top 10 Estate Planning Lawyers in Minneapolis

Minnesota imposes its own estate tax starting at $3 million per person — far below the federal threshold. That alone makes Minneapolis estate planning a different exercise than in many states. The firms below build plans that handle the federal-plus-Minnesota stack, plus the probate that follows.

These 10 Minneapolis estate-planning firms are most often cited by Best Lawyers, Super Lawyers, Avvo, Justia, and Chambers HNW. Each handles wills, revocable trusts, irrevocable trusts, healthcare directives, powers of attorney, and the Minnesota estate-tax planning the state's $3M exemption requires. Several also handle probate through Hennepin County Probate Court. We did not accept payment for placement.

How we picked these 10: We reviewed verifiable peer rankings (Best Lawyers, Super Lawyers, Chambers and Partners, Avvo), bar association recognition, state bar standing, published verdicts and settlements, client review patterns, and board certifications where applicable. Firms that appeared consistently across independent sources made the list. We do not accept payment for placement and we do not write sponsored reviews. More on our methodology →

1

Bassford Remele

Minneapolis, MN Founded 1882 Mid-size

Practice focus: Estate planning, probate, trust litigation

One of Minnesota's oldest law firms. Best Lawyers and Super Lawyers honorees across the estate planning and probate team. Handles customized estate plans, sophisticated tax planning, and contested probate.

Fee structure
Hourly / Flat options
Free consultation
Paid initial

Why they made the list: Deep estate-tax bench. Right pick if your estate is approaching the Minnesota threshold and needs irrevocable-trust planning.

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2

Anthony Ostlund Louwagie Dressen & Boylan P.A.

Minneapolis, MN Founded 1996 Mid-size

Practice focus: Trusts and estates, estate planning, probate

Specializes in tailored estate planning solutions with a focus on personalized service. Best Lawyers recognized; attorneys consistently named to Super Lawyers in Estate Planning and Probate.

Fee structure
Hourly / Flat options
Free consultation
Paid initial

Why they made the list: Strong fit for individuals and family businesses needing integrated personal and business succession planning.

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3

Felhaber Larson

Minneapolis, MN Founded 1990 Mid-size

Practice focus: Estate planning, business succession, fiduciary services

Multi-practice firm with a dedicated estate planning and probate group. Attorneys recognized by Best Lawyers and Super Lawyers. Offers estate, gift, and generation-skipping tax planning alongside business-succession structures.

Fee structure
Hourly / Flat options
Free consultation
Paid initial

Why they made the list: When your estate plan must coordinate with closely held business interests, this team handles both sides under one roof.

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4

Stone Arch Law Office, PLLC

Minneapolis, MN Founded 2012 Boutique

Practice focus: Estate planning, probate, trust administration

Northeast Minneapolis estate-planning boutique built around clear, flat-fee plan packages for families and individuals. Strong client reviews and Avvo Clients' Choice recognition.

Fee structure
Flat fee
Free consultation
Free

Why they made the list: Transparent flat-fee pricing for basic and intermediate plans. Right pick if you want a fixed number before you sign.

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5

Metropolitan Law Group, PLLC

Minneapolis, MN Founded 1990 Boutique

Practice focus: Estate planning, elder law, special needs trusts

Twin Cities estate-planning and elder-law boutique known for Medicaid planning, special-needs trusts, and intergenerational planning. Strong client reviews.

Fee structure
Flat fee / Hourly
Free consultation
Free

Why they made the list: Elder-law fluency that general estate-planning firms lack. Right pick when long-term-care planning or special needs is in the picture.

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6

Johnson/Turner Legal

Minneapolis, MN Founded 2009 Mid-size

Practice focus: Estate planning, probate, family law

Twin Cities firm with multiple offices and a focus on flat-fee estate planning packages. Avvo and Super Lawyers recognition; strong digital intake and client portal.

Fee structure
Flat fee
Free consultation
Free

Why they made the list: Modern client experience: online intake, portal, and standardized packages. Good fit if you want a less paper-heavy process.

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7

Scott M. Hespen Law, PLLC

Minneapolis, MN Founded 2007 Solo

Practice focus: Estate planning, probate, business succession

Minneapolis solo attorney with strong Avvo and Google reviews. Offers wills, trusts, and small-business succession planning.

Fee structure
Flat fee / Hourly
Free consultation
Free

Why they made the list: Direct attorney access throughout. Right pick if you want the same lawyer from the first call through funding.

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8

Sjoberg & Tebelius, P.A.

Minneapolis, MN Founded 1985 Mid-size

Practice focus: Estate planning, probate, real estate

Woodbury-based firm that serves the Twin Cities metro including Minneapolis. Long-tenured estate-planning practice with multiple Best Lawyers and Super Lawyers honorees.

Fee structure
Hourly / Flat options
Free consultation
Free

Why they made the list: Steady, conservative drafting style. Good fit for clients who want plans that will hold up across decades without aggressive tax structures.

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9

Heltzer Law Office, P.A.

Minneapolis, MN Founded 1989 Solo

Practice focus: Estate planning, probate, elder law

Long-tenured Minneapolis solo with strong Avvo reviews. Focused on individual estate plans, probate administration, and elder-law issues including Medicaid planning.

Fee structure
Flat fee / Hourly
Free consultation
Free

Why they made the list: Decades of probate work. Right pick when probate is already pending and you need experienced administration help fast.

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10

Sandahl & Damhof Law Office

Minneapolis, MN Founded 1995 Boutique

Practice focus: Estate planning, probate, business law

Estate planning and probate boutique serving the Minneapolis metro. Strong Google reviews and a focus on family-friendly, personalized planning.

Fee structure
Flat fee / Hourly
Free consultation
Free

Why they made the list: Plain-English style, good for families who have never worked with an estate-planning lawyer before and want a careful walkthrough.

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What to expect from a Minneapolis estate plan

First call is often free (30 minutes) or a paid initial consultation ($250 to $450) credited toward the plan. The firm sends an asset and family questionnaire; you complete it before drafting starts. Drafts of will, trust(s), healthcare directive, and powers of attorney arrive in 2 to 4 weeks. Signing meeting takes 60 to 90 minutes and includes notary and witnesses. Funding the trust (re-titling accounts and real estate) typically takes another 4 to 8 weeks. Complex estate-tax planning with irrevocable trusts (ILIT, SLAT, QPRT, IDGT) runs 60 to 120 days.

What does a Minneapolis estate plan cost?

Basic plans (will, healthcare directive, powers of attorney for an individual or couple) run $750 to $2,500 flat in Minneapolis. Revocable living trust packages run $2,500 to $5,500. Plans with Minnesota estate-tax planning, irrevocable trusts, business-succession structures, or special-needs trusts run $5,000 to $20,000+. Hourly rates for complex estate work range $300 to $650/hour. Probate in Hennepin County typically runs $3,500 to $15,000 for uncontested formal probate, more for contested matters.

How to choose between these 10 firms

All ten firms above are competent practitioners. The right pick depends on the shape of your matter, not on which firm has the biggest billboard. The patterns we see:

Pick a boutique when your case is high-stakes but narrow in scope, you want a senior attorney doing the actual work, and you are willing to trade brand recognition for senior attention. Boutiques typically run $325-$525 per hour for the lead attorney and have lower overhead. The risk: if the firm gets conflicted out or busy, your case may stall.

Pick a mid-size firm when your matter has multiple moving parts, or when you need a steady team with a bench behind it. Mid-size firms in Minneapolis typically charge $375-$650 per hour and are the natural fit for most estate planning cases.

Pick a large firm when the matter is genuinely large in dollars at stake, complex in legal issues, multi-jurisdictional, or institutionally sensitive. Large firms charge $450-$850 per hour but bring depth across practice areas. The risk: junior attorneys do most of the day-to-day work unless you push for senior involvement.

What is specific about estate planning cases in Minneapolis

Minneapolis is its own market. The procedure, the courts, and the strategy are city- and state-specific in ways that matter to your outcome.

The local courthouse matters. Hennepin County Probate Court is the venue for most estate planning matters originating in Minneapolis. The judges have published procedures, scheduling preferences, and trial calendars that an experienced local lawyer knows by heart. A firm that has never appeared in front of your judge is starting from scratch on the procedural side, and that costs you time and money.

Filing deadlines are strict. Statutes of limitations, notice requirements, pre-suit certifications, and Minnesota procedural rules are unforgiving. A missed deadline often means a lost case — full stop. Your first conversation with a lawyer should include a written confirmation of the controlling deadlines.

Minnesota law has specific quirks. Minnesota statutes governing this practice area shape strategy, leverage, damages, and settlement value. A firm that primarily practices in another state is starting at a disadvantage even when admitted in Minnesota.

Local juries and judges have patterns. Verdict patterns, judicial temperament, and settlement norms in Hennepin County Probate Court are local knowledge. A trial-capable firm uses venue, judge assignment, and jury demographics strategically.

Red flags to watch for when picking a estate planning lawyer in Minneapolis

Most firms in Minneapolis are competent. A few are problematic. The patterns to avoid:

Guaranteed outcomes. No ethical attorney can guarantee a result. If a firm promises a specific recovery, dismissal, custody outcome, or settlement number, walk away. Ethics rules in every U.S. state prohibit guarantees, and any lawyer making them is either uninformed or willing to lie to get your business.

The disappearing partner. You meet a senior partner at intake, then never speak to them again. The case is handled by an unsupervised junior or a paralegal. Ask in writing who will be your day-to-day attorney, how often you will hear from them, and what happens when they are unavailable.

Pressure to sign immediately. Reputable firms give you the retainer in writing, time to read it, and the option to take it home. High-pressure intake is almost always a sign of a volume mill rather than a craftsperson's practice.

No verifiable track record. The firm should be able to point to verdicts, settlements, peer rankings, or bar association recognition. "We have helped thousands of clients" is marketing copy. Specific numbers, named cases, and third-party rankings are evidence.

Vague fee terms. "Do not worry about cost" is a red flag. Every legitimate Minneapolis lawyer will give you a written engagement letter with the fee structure, what is covered, what triggers extra charges, and what happens if you fire them.

10 questions to ask in your free consultation

Most firms on this list offer a free or low-cost initial consultation. Use it. Bring a list of questions and write down the answers. Compare across at least two firms before you sign.

  1. Who, specifically, will handle my case day to day? Get a name. Get an email. Get their bar number so you can verify their standing.
  2. How many cases like mine have you handled in the last three years? You want a number, not a brochure line.
  3. How many of those went to trial? Settlement skill is important. Trial skill is what gives you leverage to settle well.
  4. What is your fee, and what does it cover? Get the answer in writing before you sign anything.
  5. What case expenses am I responsible for, and when? Out-of-pocket costs (filing fees, deposition costs, expert witnesses) surprise people. Ask now.
  6. What is the realistic range of outcomes for a case like mine? A good lawyer will give you a range. A bad one will promise the high end.
  7. How long will it take? Honest estimate, with the assumptions stated.
  8. How and how often will I hear from you? Email-only? Calls? Monthly updates? Set the expectation now.
  9. What happens if I want to change lawyers later? Rules allow it; the fee is sorted between firms. Make sure you understand the mechanics.
  10. What is the worst-case outcome for my case? A lawyer who refuses to discuss downside risk is selling you something.

Get matched with a vetted Minneapolis estate planning firm

Tell us about your situation. We will forward your details to the firms on this list (or others nearby) best fit for your matter. No fees to you. Confidential.

Frequently asked questions

Do I need a trust in Minnesota?

Not always. A simple will is enough for many smaller estates. A revocable living trust avoids probate, keeps your plan private, and is helpful if you own out-of-state real estate, want incapacity planning, or your estate is approaching $3M (Minnesota's estate tax threshold). Your lawyer's first job is to figure out which document set you actually need.

What is Minnesota's estate tax exemption?

$3 million per person in 2026. Above that, Minnesota imposes a state estate tax with rates from 13 percent to 16 percent. The federal exemption is much higher ($13.61M in 2024, scheduled to drop in 2026). Many Minneapolis families above $3M need Minnesota-specific planning even when no federal tax is due.

How long does probate take in Hennepin County?

Uncontested formal probate runs 6 to 12 months. Informal probate is faster (3 to 6 months) and works for smaller, uncomplicated estates. Contested probate or will challenges can take 1 to 3 years.

What does a basic estate plan include?

A will, a revocable living trust (in many cases), a healthcare directive (Minnesota's combined living will and healthcare power of attorney), a durable power of attorney for finances, and beneficiary-designation reviews for retirement accounts and life insurance. Some plans also include a HIPAA release and guardianship designation for minor children.

What happens if I die without a will in Minnesota?

Your assets pass under Minnesota intestacy law (Chapter 524). Spouse and children typically split the estate by statutory formula. The court appoints a personal representative — not necessarily who you would have chosen. Minors inherit, but their share is held in a court-supervised conservatorship until age 18 (rarely what parents would want).

Do I need a healthcare directive?

Yes. Minnesota's combined healthcare directive lets you name an agent and document your wishes for end-of-life care, organ donation, and pain management. Without one, family members may have to seek a court-appointed conservator if you become incapacitated.

Can I write my own will in Minnesota?

Legally yes, but mistakes are common and expensive. Self-drafted wills that fail (missing witnesses, ambiguous language, improperly executed) push your estate into intestacy or trigger litigation. Most Minneapolis lawyers offer basic flat-fee plans under $1,500 that eliminate that risk entirely.

Should my plan address digital assets?

Yes. Minnesota's Revised Uniform Fiduciary Access to Digital Assets Act controls how your executor or trustee can access email, social media, cryptocurrency, and online financial accounts. A modern plan includes specific digital-asset language.

One last thing. Choosing a lawyer is personal. Read the reviews. Call two or three firms before you sign. Ask each one: How many estate planning matters like mine have you handled in the last three years, and how many went to trial? The answer tells you what kind of lawyer you are actually hiring. — The LawFirmSquare team