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
| Feature | Rocket Lawyer |
|---|---|
| Premium subscription | $39.99 / month |
| Free trial | 7 days, full access |
| Will + trust + directive + POA | All included in subscription |
| Attorney consultation | 30 min per new legal issue, monthly |
| Document templates | Unlimited (rental agreements, NDAs, etc.) |
| Document review by attorney | Included |
| Updates | Unlimited while subscribed |
| State coverage | All 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
- You have ongoing legal needs. Small business owner, landlord, freelancer with frequent contracts.
- You want attorney access on demand, not just at signup. The monthly 30-min consultation is the killer feature.
- You only need estate planning and want it free โ complete your plan during the 7-day trial and cancel.
- You'll likely need to update documents over time. Unlimited updates while subscribed beats $20/amendment at LegalZoom.
Who should look elsewhere
- One-time will, no other legal needs โ FreeWill (free) or Trust & Will ($159).
- You want attorney input AT signup but not ongoing โ LegalZoom Estate Plan Bundle ($349 with 30-min consult).
- Most-complex estates ($5M+, business succession, multi-jurisdiction) โ hire an estate attorney directly.
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.