WalletGrower
ESTATE PLANNING ยท REVIEW

Rocket Lawyer Review (2026)

Updated May 8, 2026 ยท Reviewed by the WalletGrower editorial team ยท We tested the 7-day free trial, completed a full estate plan, and used the attorney consultation feature for a stepchild guardianship question.

Bottom line

Rocket Lawyer is uniquely positioned: the only subscription model in the estate-planning space, which makes it the wrong tool for one-time estate planning but the right tool when you have ongoing legal needs. Use the 7-day free trial to complete your estate plan for free if that's all you need. Pay the $39.99/mo when you have other legal needs (small business, rental property, frequent contracts) where the unlimited templates and attorney access pay for themselves.

At a glance

FeatureRocket Lawyer
Premium subscription$39.99 / month
Free trial7 days, full access
Will + trust + directive + POAAll included in subscription
Attorney consultation30 min per new legal issue, monthly
Document templatesUnlimited (rental agreements, NDAs, etc.)
Document review by attorneyIncluded
UpdatesUnlimited while subscribed
State coverageAll 50

What Rocket Lawyer does well

The 7-day free trial is genuinely full-featured.You get the same documents, the same attorney access, and the same templates as paid subscribers. Many users complete their estate plan during the trial and cancel โ€” that's a legitimate use case and Rocket Lawyer doesn't make it difficult.

Attorney access is real.The 30-minute monthly consultation isn't a sales pitch โ€” it's an actual practicing attorney from Rocket Lawyer's network reviewing your situation. Useful for one-off questions outside what a static document can answer ("does my stepchild guardianship language hold in California?").

Unlimited templates. If you also need a rental agreement, an NDA, an LLC operating agreement, a bill of sale, etc., the same subscription covers them. For someone who runs a small business or rents out property, this stack is a strong value at $479/yr.

What Rocket Lawyer doesn't do as well

Subscription model is the wrong shape for one-time estate planning. If you only want a will and don't plan to use the service again, Trust & Will's $159 will or FreeWill's $0 will is a better economic fit. You'd need to complete the plan during the 7-day trial and cancel to match โ€” that's legitimate but adds friction.

Slightly more cluttered UI than Trust & Will. The document creation flow is good, but the dashboard tries to surface a lot of features at once. First-time users sometimes report feeling overwhelmed by the number of options.

Cancellation requires a phone call or chat. The cancellation flow exists in the dashboard but routes you through a retention conversation. Not a deal-breaker but worth knowing.

Who should use Rocket Lawyer

Who should look elsewhere

Frequently asked questions

Affiliate disclosure: WalletGrower may receive compensation when you sign up through our links. This never affects rankings. See our Estate Planning hub for the side-by-side comparison.

Information is for educational purposes and not legal advice.