Practice Areas

Estate Planning

Wills, trusts, powers of attorney, and healthcare directives — crafted around your family's specific needs and wishes.

What We Do

A plan that protects the people
you care about most

Estate planning is one of the most important things you can do for your family — and one of the most commonly postponed. The truth is, you don't need a large estate to need a plan. You need people who depend on you.

At Jacobs, Wilson & Onofry, we approach estate planning as a personal conversation, not a paperwork exercise. Before we recommend anything, we take the time to understand your family, your assets, your concerns, and your goals. Then we build a plan that fits your actual life.

Whether you're starting from scratch, updating a plan that no longer reflects your circumstances, or working through a complicated family situation, we'll guide you through every step with patience and clarity. We represent clients throughout Pike County, the Poconos, and out-of-state clients with Pennsylvania property or family connections.

Estate planning done right doesn't just distribute assets — it prevents conflict, protects your children, provides for vulnerable family members, and makes sure your values carry forward. It gives your family clarity at the hardest possible moment.

What's Included
  • Wills (simple and complex)
  • Revocable and irrevocable trusts
  • Durable powers of attorney
  • Healthcare proxies & living wills
  • Beneficiary designations review
  • Estate plan reviews & updates
  • Planning for blended families
  • Minor children & guardian designations

Ready to put a plan
in place?

Most estate plans start with a single conversation. We'll listen, answer your questions, and explain your options — no jargon, no pressure.

(570) 904-2098
Monday – Friday · 8:30am – 4:30pm

This website constitutes attorney advertising. Information contained herein is intended to serve as general advice that may or may not pertain to the laws of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. Communication to or with the firm does not constitute the creation of an attorney-client relationship.