About Sarah
Sarah Vultaggio built a foundation in two different fields before turning to law. She earned dual Bachelor of Arts degrees in International Relations and Economics from Michigan State University in 2002. Four years later she graduated from Western Michigan University Cooley Law School in 2006, where her studies emphasized business matters and wills and trusts.
Vultaggio is licensed to practice in Texas. Early in her career she joined Sears & Bennett, LLP, and records show she served there as a lawyer in 2009. That experience put her in a small firm environment where client matters often require handling legal work across several areas at once.
Her training combines business law concepts and estate planning principles. The law school coursework in wills and trusts provided a base in drafting core estate documents. The economics and international relations background gives a broader perspective on financial and organizational issues that can arise in client matters.
At Sears & Bennett, LLP, Vultaggio has worked on matters that touch on corporate and personal planning. Her practice involves preparing wills and trust instruments and assisting small business clients with transactional needs. She handles document drafting and client counseling on structuring ownership and succession in closely held enterprises. The work often requires translating technical legal rules into options that clients can evaluate.
Colleagues describe her approach as practical. She breaks problems into manageable parts and focuses on clear explanations for clients who may be unfamiliar with legal terminology. That plain-language approach helps owners and families understand choices about governance, asset protection, and the drafting of testamentary documents.
Outside the office, Vultaggio’s dual undergraduate degrees continue to inform her perspective on client matters that intersect with financial planning and cross-border considerations. The combination of economics and international relations provides context when business transactions involve complex ownership structures or multiple jurisdictions.
She remains based at Sears & Bennett, LLP, where she continues to work with individuals and small businesses on estate planning and transactional business matters. She currently practices business law and estate planning.