North Carolina Legal Forms
Attorney-verified legal templates that comply with North Carolina state statutes, including the NC Residential Rental Agreements Act and the NC General Statutes.
Popular in North Carolina
North Carolina LLC Operating Agreement
Structure your North Carolina LLC under the North Carolina Revised Uniform LLC Act (N.C.G.S. §57D). An operating agreement is not legally required but is essential to define member rights and avoid default statutory rules.
North Carolina Residential Lease Agreement
A rental agreement compliant with the NC Residential Rental Agreements Act (N.C.G.S. §42). North Carolina requires landlords to maintain fit premises and limits security deposits (1.5 months for month-to-month leases).
North Carolina Last Will and Testament
Ensure your estate is distributed under your terms per N.C.G.S. §31. North Carolina requires a will to be witnessed by two competent individuals, neither of whom is named as a beneficiary in the will.
North Carolina Health Care Power of Attorney
Designate a healthcare agent under N.C.G.S. §32A-25. The NC Health Care Power of Attorney is a specific statutory form widely used by hospitals. It must be signed before two witnesses and a notary public.
North Carolina General Warranty Deed
The most commonly used deed in North Carolina real estate transactions. A General Warranty Deed provides the buyer with the greatest protection and must be recorded with the County Register of Deeds.
North Carolina Revocable Living Trust
North Carolina probate can take 12–18 months for larger estates. A revocable living trust transfers assets to beneficiaries outside of probate, saving time and keeping your estate distribution private.
North Carolina Court Self-Help Forms
North Carolina's court system provides standardized forms for self-represented litigants in areas like summary ejectment (eviction), small claims, and domestic relations. These are available from the North Carolina Courts website.
For private transactions and legal planning—LLC formation, lease agreements, and estate planning—use the attorney-verified templates above, designed to satisfy North Carolina's legal requirements.