Updated: April 2025  |  bremo.io financial guides

Writing a Will in Canada: What You Need to Know 2025

A will is the legal document that directs what happens to your money, property, and possessions after you die. Without one, your province decides for you — and the result may be nothing like what you would have wanted. Despite how important they are, the majority of Canadians still don't have a valid will. This guide explains everything you need to know to get one done right.

Why it matters: Dying without a will (intestate) can mean your assets go to people you'd never have chosen, your estate takes years longer to settle, and legal fees consume a far larger share of your estate than a will would have cost.

What a Will Does (and Doesn't Do)

A will can:

A will cannot:

Types of Wills in Canada

Formal (Witnessed) Will

The standard type of will in Canada. Must be in writing, signed by you (the testator), and witnessed by two witnesses who sign in your presence and in each other's presence. Witnesses must be adults and must not be beneficiaries named in the will (in most provinces). This is the recommended type for any will of substance.

Holograph Will

A will written entirely in your own handwriting and signed by you — no witnesses required. Valid in most Canadian provinces (not valid in PEI, though). While valid, holograph wills are riskier: they're more likely to be challenged, may be ambiguous, and often create more work for the executor. A holograph will is better than no will, but a professionally prepared will is better still.

Notarial Will (Quebec Only)

In Quebec, a will prepared and signed before a notary (and one witness) is automatically authentic and does not require probate. This is a significant advantage — it saves time and probate costs. Most Quebec residents are advised to use a notarial will.

Online Wills

Several services now offer online will creation (LegalWills.ca, Willful, Epilogue Wills). These are generally less expensive than using a lawyer ($100-$200 vs. $300-$1,000+) and are legally valid if properly executed. They work well for straightforward estates. For anything complex — blended families, trusts, significant assets, business ownership — use a lawyer.

What to Include in Your Will

A complete will should address:

Making Your Will Valid

Requirements for a formal will in most provinces:

Costs of Making a Will in Canada

Will costs vary significantly:

These costs are a fraction of what a contested or incomplete will can cost your estate. An estate dispute can burn tens of thousands of dollars in legal fees. Spend the money now.

Dying Without a Will in Canada (Intestacy)

If you die without a valid will, provincial intestacy laws determine who receives your estate. The results might surprise you:

Updating Your Will

Your will should be reviewed every 3-5 years and updated after major life events:

Don't write on an existing will to make changes — alterations to a will can invalidate it. Instead, make a codicil (a formal amendment) or create an entirely new will.

Storing Your Will

Your will is no use if no one can find it. Best practices:

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