Leafplanner digitizes the critical documents that make probate manageable – targeting wealthy families where the process averages 42 months and thousands of legal hours without a centralized record.
ENTRY ANGLES
Superior UX platform for estate planning vs law firms and family offices · Early-stage wealth platform targeting first-generation wealth creators in emerging markets · Long-term customer relationship model leveraging early market entry before incumbent lock-in
VERTICALS
CAPABILITIES
Estate planning domain expertise and compliance, Long-term customer LTV monetization and acquisition economics, Go-to-market strategy for early-stage wealth cohorts
Estate settlement is one of the few financial processes that gets harder as families get wealthier – and Leafplanner was built to fix that. The platform helps high-net-worth individuals organize their assets so that heirs and family members can actually navigate the estate when the time comes.
The numbers behind the problem are striking. For families with substantial wealth, the probate process takes an average of 42 months and can easily exceed a thousand billable hours of legal work. And even when heirs do receive assets, 70% of families lose their inherited wealth by the second generation – not through bad luck, but because the inheritors were never prepared for what they were receiving.
Leafplanner addresses this on three fronts.
The first is a comprehensive asset registry: every property, company stake, investment account, brokerage position, crypto holding, and other real or digital asset, along with the key contacts who would need to be reached in an emergency. The platform handles the full spectrum of asset classes a modern wealthy individual might hold.
The second is a risk advisory layer. As users catalogue their assets, the platform flags risks typical of each asset type and suggests a set of management actions. Simpler questions can be handled by the platform's built-in expert system; more complex ones route to a concierge service staffed by specialists.
The third – and arguably most distinctive – component is a structured heir preparation program. It lets the primary account holder assign areas of responsibility to individual heirs, grant them tiered access to relevant contacts, and run a gradual financial education track. The goal is not just to transfer assets but to transfer the understanding needed to manage them. As one early client put it after onboarding: "It's amazing how many things I had forgotten about or underestimated."
Pricing reflects the platform's premium positioning. The first year costs between $5,000 and $15,000 depending on tier – which partly determines how much of the setup work the Leafplanner team handles directly. From year two onward, the annual subscription drops to $2,500–$6,000, roughly half the first-year cost, because the heavy lifting of cataloguing assets and establishing heir relationships is already done.
The founding team comes from family office and wealth management backgrounds, which shows in the platform's design: this is not a startup guessing at what wealthy families need, but practitioners turning their own hard-won experience into software.
The company has raised its first outside capital: $1.33 million.
A [related review](/review/jeto-vsjo-chto-ostanetsja-posle-menja) covered Trust & Will, which operates in an adjacent space. That company has continued to grow well, raising another $15 million in February and bringing total funding to $48 million, with the founder reporting revenue doubling year over year.
The difference between the two is deliberate market segmentation. Trust & Will targets a mass-market audience with accessible pricing – estate trusts starting at $699, wills from $89. Leafplanner targets the high-net-worth segment with bespoke service and premium pricing.
Both approaches are valid, and the contrast illustrates a durable business principle: the worst place to be is in the middle. Mass-market buyers tend to choose the cheapest option; quality- and status-conscious buyers tend to choose the most premium. A middle-tier product at a middle price risks being outcompeted by both. Chasing "best value" positioning is more dangerous than it sounds.
The macro tailwind here is also worth noting. Modern wealthy individuals hold a far more complex portfolio than their counterparts from previous generations – equity stakes, real estate across multiple jurisdictions, crypto, angel investments, fund positions. As economic opportunity has broadened, so has the diversity of assets that need managing. That complexity creates an ongoing structural need for platforms like Leafplanner.
Then there is the LTV argument, which is unusually strong. Once a client has catalogued their assets on the platform, the switching cost is high – migrating all that structured data, heir relationships, and contact networks to a competing service is a real hassle. That stickiness compounds over time.
And time is a key variable here: life expectancy for high-income individuals continues to rise faster than the population average. By 2040, high-income individuals who reach 65 are projected to live another 23 years. If a thoughtful person starts planning around 50, Leafplanner is looking at a potential customer relationship of roughly 38 years. At a mid-tier subscription of around $4,000 per year, that puts theoretical LTV around $150,000 per client – which changes how much it makes sense to spend on acquisition.
In developed markets – the US, the UK, Western Europe – estate planning is already a cultural norm, and technology platforms can compete by offering a superior experience over law firms and traditional family offices. That is a viable, if competitive, arena.
More interesting may be the emerging-market angle. Across Southeast Asia, Latin America, and parts of the Middle East, first-generation wealth creation is happening at scale. These new-wealth cohorts have not inherited a family estate planning tradition, which means they are not already locked into incumbents. Platforms that reach them early can establish the kind of long-term relationships that Leafplanner's LTV model depends on – and justify meaningful acquisition spending against projected lifetime value.
The core insight for anyone building in this space: two macro trends point in the same direction. Growing asset complexity drives the need for the product; rising longevity in the high-income segment drives the value of each customer relationship. The strategic question is not whether demand exists, but which beachhead – incumbent-heavy developed markets or faster-growing emerging ones – offers the better path to scale.