About Mister AMS
Mister AMS is short for Mister Autonomous Management Systems. The short brand is what you'll see across the site; the full name is the legal entity behind it.
Mister AMS exists because the gap between "I have a hunch I should be doing something" and "I've done the right thing and I understand why" is enormous, expensive, and badly served by the rest of the internet.
What Mister AMS does
- Learn— an optional flashcard utility for the vocabulary you'll hit: trusts, entities, probate terms, tax concepts.
- Decide — the core of the product. A neutral option explorer across six categories: trusts, business entities, end-of-life documents, beneficiary and titling structures, insurance and retirement vehicles, and tax strategies. Every option is presented fact-first, cites its sources, and flags what varies by state.
- Organize— actionable execution paths. Each option carries a DIY-tier badge, a checklist, state-specific flags, blank form templates where appropriate, and — critically — a "bridge-to-pro" section that tells you exactly when DIY stops being safe and what kind of professional to seek.
What Mister AMS is not
Mister AMS is not a law firm, an accounting firm, or a financial advisor. Using Mister AMS does not create an attorney–client, accountant–client, or advisor–client relationship. Nothing on this site is a recommendation tailored to your specific situation — it is general, educational information only. For anything fact-specific, consult a licensed professional in your jurisdiction.
Scope today
- Federal coverage.
- State-specific notes for Virginia, West Virginia, and Alabama.
- More states will be added over time.
Sources
Every explainer page cites vetted references. We rely on primary sources (IRS publications, statutes, uniform acts from the Uniform Law Commission) and well-regarded secondary sources (Cornell Legal Information Institute, the American Bar Association, state bar associations, Nolo).