Resources

Guides for island matters

Plain-language starting points for the questions we hear most often. These are general information, not legal advice — every matter turns on its own facts.

Buying property on Orcas Island

Island parcels come with questions a mainland checklist won’t catch. Before you waive contingencies, know the answers to these:

  • Title & access — does access cross private land, and is the easement recorded? Who maintains the road, and is there an agreement that says so?
  • Water — well, shared system, or rain catchment? If shared, ask for the water-system agreement and recent test results.
  • Septic — when was the system last inspected, and is it sized for the use you intend?
  • Shoreline — waterfront parcels carry state and county shoreline rules that limit what you can build or change.
  • Boundaries — older parcels may never have been formally surveyed; fences are not boundaries.

An estate-planning checklist

A complete plan is usually a small set of documents that answer who decides, who inherits, and who steps in:

  • A will — and for many island families, a revocable living trust
  • Durable power of attorney for finances
  • Health care directive and medical power of attorney
  • Beneficiary designations that match the plan (retirement accounts and life insurance pass outside your will)
  • Guardianship nominations if you have minor children
  • A letter of wishes for the personal things documents don’t cover

Starting a business in San Juan County

  • Choose a structure — for most small island businesses an LLC balances protection and simplicity
  • Register with the Washington Secretary of State and get your UBI number
  • State business license, plus any county or town requirements for your activity
  • An operating agreement, even for a single owner — banks and buyers will ask for it
  • Contracts and liability waivers appropriate to what you actually do

What probate actually involves

Washington probate is more straightforward than its reputation. The court appoints a personal representative, creditors get notice, assets are gathered and debts paid, and what remains is distributed — commonly six months to a year. Good planning (and often a trust) can simplify or avoid the process; poor beneficiary paperwork is what tends to complicate it.

Useful official resources

These guides are general information for Orcas Island and San Juan County readers — they aren’t legal advice and don’t create an attorney–client relationship. See our disclaimer.

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