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Why You Need a Will in Canada: What Happens If You Die Without One

Updated

A will is the most important financial document most Canadians never create. An estimated 60% of Canadian adults have no will at all.

The cost of dying without a will

ScenarioWithout a willWith a will
Common-law partner of 10 yearsGets nothing in most provincesGets what you intended
Minor children (guardian)Court appoints guardianYou chose the guardian
Minor children (inheritance)Lump sum at 18, no trustStaged inheritance, protection
Specific bequest to friend/charityImpossibleExecuted per your wishes
Family dispute over distributionCommon, expensive litigationWill governs; far fewer disputes
Estate administrationSlower, more expensiveFaster; executor has authority

Intestacy rules at a glance (if you die without a will)

ProvinceSpouse’s shareCommon-law partner’s intestate rights
OntarioFirst $350K + ½ of remainderNone (use will or cohabitation agreement)
BCFirst $300K + ½ of remainderSpouse rights after 2+ years cohabitation
AlbertaFirst $150K + ½ of remainderNone (SDA rights separate from intestacy)
QuebecNone — governed by Civil CodeNone
ManitobaFirst $50K + ½ of remainderNone
SaskatchewanFirst $100K + ½ of remainderNone

Rules change. Verify current provincial intestacy legislation for your province.


What a complete will should address

  1. Executor appointment — primary and alternate
  2. Guardian for minor children — and alternate
  3. Specific bequests — named gifts to individuals or charities
  4. Residue clause — who gets everything after specific gifts and debts
  5. Testamentary trust — if you have minor children, disabled dependants, or wish to stage an inheritance
  6. Burial/cremation wishes — not legally binding but helps family
  7. Digital estate clause — authorization for executor to access digital accounts
  8. Revocation clause — formally revokes all prior wills

Will creation options in Canada

OptionCostBest for
Willful (online)$99–$199Simple estates, no dependants with special needs
Epilogue (online)$119–$199Simple estates, couples
Notary (Quebec, BC)$150–$600BC/QC residents (notarial will is self-proving)
Estate lawyer (wills specialist)$300–$2,000+Business interests, trusts, complex assets
Holograph (handwritten)Free (DIY)Emergency, legal in most provinces but risky

What a will should cover

A well-drafted Canadian will typically addresses six areas:

SectionWhat it covers
Executor appointmentWho administers the estate and follows the will’s instructions
BeneficiariesWho receives what — specific bequests, residue, percentages
Guardian for minor childrenWho raises your children if both parents die
Testamentary trustsHolding assets for minor or disabled beneficiaries
Funeral and burial wishesCremation, burial, organ donation preferences
Digital assetsOnline accounts, cryptocurrency, social media

What happens without a will (intestate succession by province)

If you die without a will, each province has its own intestacy rules:

ProvinceSpouse getsChildren get
OntarioFirst $350,000 + half of remainderHalf of remainder split equally
BCFirst $300,000 + half of remainderHalf of remainder split equally
AlbertaFirst $150,000 + half of remainder (one child) or $150,000 + one-third (multiple)Remainder
QuebecHalf of family patrimony + half of remainderHalf of remainder

Common-law partners receive nothing under intestacy in most provinces — only legally married spouses have rights. If you are in a common-law relationship without a will, your partner could receive nothing.

How to make your will legally valid in Canada

For a formal will to be valid:

  • You must be 18+ (or married, or in the armed forces — exceptions vary by province)
  • You must be of sound mind at the time of signing
  • It must be signed in front of two witnesses (who are not beneficiaries or their spouses)
  • Witnesses must also sign in your presence

A holograph will (entirely handwritten and signed by you) does not need witnesses and is valid in most Canadian provinces — but it is risky because handwritten documents are easily contested and ambiguous.

Frequently asked questions

How often should I update my will? Review your will after any major life event: marriage, divorce, birth of a child, death of a beneficiary, significant change in assets, or moving to a different province. As a general rule, review it every 3–5 years even without major changes. Marriage automatically revokes a will in most provinces; divorce does not — an ex-spouse named in a will may still inherit.

Can I write my own will in Canada? Yes. A holograph will (entirely handwritten in your own hand and signed) is legally valid in Ontario, Alberta, BC, and most other provinces. However, DIY wills are more frequently challenged, may miss important provisions (like a guardian clause or trust for minor children), and can create expensive probate complications. An online service or estate lawyer is recommended for any estate over $50,000.

Does a will avoid probate in Canada? No. A will must typically go through probate — a court process to confirm its validity. Probate fees range from 0% (Quebec, Alberta for estates under $150,000) to ~1.5% (Ontario) of the estate’s value. Some assets — like RRSP/TFSA accounts with named beneficiaries and jointly owned property — pass outside the will and avoid probate entirely.