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Answer these questions to make sure you get the right will for your circumstances.
Convenient and supportive

Our specialist lawyers and paralegals have thought of everything to make it quick and easy for you.

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You're in control

Get started, save where you’ve got to, take breaks, come back to it when you like.

No Solicitor
No solicitor needed

Create professional, legally binding documents without paying expensive solicitors’ fees.

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Specialist support

Our guidance notes should cover everything but we’re here to help if you get stuck.

Start the process
1. Choose a will Answer a few questions to find the right will for you and choose between a Self Service, Review or Premium package. Choose a will and package
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2. Pay and get writing Follow our guidance notes and watch your will come to life online as you write. Pause and save at any point, come back to it later. Or just crack on – speedsters get it done in 30 minutes.
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3. Get it reviewed Choose a Review or Premium package and our wills specialists will review your completed document for you, so you can be sure it’s legally compliant.
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4. Sign it Once signed and witnessed correctly, your will is legally binding but not set in stone – you can amend it in the future if you wish, by adding codicils.
Why everyone should make a will

Many of us assume that, if we die without a will, our possessions will just go to the people closest to us. But in fact, the fate of our possessions, our money and even our home, would be decided by the law.

Making a will can reduce the financial and administrative burden on your loved ones, giving them certainty and making conflict less likely. 

Things to think about

List Your assets
Beneficieries Who will benefit
Guardians Guardians for children
Executors Your Executors
Common questions

About completing your will

What’s the difference between mirror wills and a pair of wills?

Mirror wills are usually made by married couples or civil partners. Normally, the first to die leaves their estate to the survivor. When the survivor dies, the estate passes to the beneficiaries (who are the same people in both wills).

A pair of wills are two wills made by two people with the flexibility to make them similar to each other or completely different.

What type of gift can I make in my will?

  1. Specific gifts – such as your jewellery, shares or property
  2. Cash – known as ‘pecuniary’ gifts
  3. Residuary gifts – what's left after all debts have been paid and all other legacies have been accounted for.

Who can witness my will?

In England & Wales, a will must be witnessed by two independent people over the age of 18. Your witnesses don’t need to know what’s in your will.

Witnesses cannot be:

  • blind,
  • beneficiaries in your will,
  • spouses or civil partners of beneficiaries in your will, or
  • anyone related to you