Estate Planning in Ocala: the Local Picture
Marion County borders and contains part of The Villages, the huge 55+ retirement community (median age about 73), plus On Top of the World and Stone Creek, making it one of Florida’s strongest elder-law areas. The Villages, On Top of the World, and Stone Creek give Ocala a dense, fast-growing 55+ population doing Medicaid look-back planning, long-term-care, trusts, and lady bird homestead deeds.
Ocala’s median age is around 43, and the median home value is about $271,000. A home at that value sits well above Florida’s $75,000 summary-administration threshold, so without planning it can pull your family into a full, months-long probate. The fix is to coordinate the home, the will or trust, and any deed together, so the house passes the way you intend.
What a Complete Plan Covers
An estate plan is a coordinated set of documents, not one piece of paper: a will or a revocable living trust to direct your property, a durable power of attorney so someone can act if you can’t, and a health-care surrogate, living will, and HIPAA authorization for medical decisions. Homeowners often add a lady bird deed on the homestead. See the full estate-planning guide →
Keeping a Ocala Home Out of Probate
Your Florida homestead carries special rules: it generally can’t be left freely in a will if you have a spouse or minor child, and it passes outside the will by its own path. A funded revocable trust or a lady bird deed keeps the home out of probate while you keep full control during life. See Marion County probate → or find the right deed →
Serving Ocala and Marion County, remotely.
A free 30-minute video consult maps your plan and quotes a flat fee. No office visit required.
Book your free consultCommunities We Serve
We work with families across Marion County, including Marion Oaks, Silver Springs Shores, On Top of the World, Stone Creek, the Marion County part of The Villages, and the rest of Marion County. Any deed in your plan records with the Marion County Clerk of Court and Comptroller, whose office is at 110 NW 1st Avenue in Ocala; we prepare and e-record it for you. We are a Miami firm serving Ocala remotely; this is not a Ocala office.
Recently moved to Florida, or planning to? Make it official and cut your old state’s income tax with a Marion County Declaration of Domicile, then re-do your plan under Florida law.
Flat Fees
Trust-based plan $3,200 individual / $4,500 couple (trust + pour-over will + durable POA + health-care directives + one funding deed). Will-based plan $1,200 individual / $1,950 couple. Single documents from $299. Government recording costs are additional, at cost. See full pricing →
Frequently Asked Questions
Do you have an office in Ocala?
No. StepUp Law is a Miami firm that serves Ocala and Marion County residents remotely, by phone and video. Most of the work happens online, and your signing is coordinated to meet Florida formalities (two witnesses and a notary).
Where are deeds recorded in Marion County?
Deeds and other documents for a Marion County property are recorded with the Marion County Clerk of Court and Comptroller. We handle the recording for any deed in your plan and pass the county’s cost through at cost.
Do I need a living trust, or is a will enough?
It depends on what you own and your goals. A will alone still goes through probate; a funded revocable living trust avoids it and manages things if you lose capacity. For a single home passing to your kids, a lady bird deed may be all you need. We talk through both at the free consult.
Updated June 10, 2026. Reviewed by Kevin D. Klagge, Esq., Fla. Bar No. 99502. General information about Florida law, not legal advice, and no attorney-client relationship is created. We serve Ocala and Marion County residents remotely from our Miami office. Local figures are Census estimates (ACS 2024) and approximate.