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Check your will is valid in New Zealand

You can check your existing will has been correctly worded, and signed correctly, under New Zealand law - and also check it is consistent with the title of your house

...A quick check by Kiwilaw can avoid expensive legal complications after you die

Ask Kiwilaw to check one or both of these crucial points now

Signing and witnessing

Has your will been signed and witnessed correctly according to New Zealand law?

If your will is not legally valid, your family will need more legal paperwork after you die. They may need an application for an order to validate the will. (They cannot ignore your will even though it is invalid. It will just make things more complicated.)

A different problem can arise if it is missing some legally-required wording although it has been signed and witnessed. It may technically be valid – but only if the High Court receives an affidavit from at least one of your witnesses, or if your family confirm to the High Court that they have done a full search to check there are no other wills. In that situation, you may prefer to sign a new will now.

During the COVID-19 lockdowns, a will could be witnessed by video link rather than by witnesses who were physically present. Additional wording must be included, to show this is what happened.  You may like to have this checked, if you did it that way.

If your permanent home is now New Zealand, your overseas will may automatically be valid if it meets the requirements of New Zealand law.

For peace of mind, use Kiwilaw to check this – without delay – for only $39 (including GST).

Legal ownership of house

Do you own your own home?

If it’s co-owned, is it a ‘joint tenancy’ or ‘tenants in common’?

In a joint tenancy, ownership passes to the surviving owner and it is not part of your will.  Instead, the surviving owner will need a ‘transmission by survivorship’.

If this is not what you want, you can change it, by changing the legal title now.

Another complication arises if you co-own the house with someone who has already passed away. In that case, you should tidy up the legal title without delay. It only makes things more complicated if left until you too have passed away.

Use Kiwilaw to check your will is consistent with the legal title, for only $39.00 (incl GST and the title search).

ACT NOW! Use this form. Upload a copy of your will (all pages). Pay by credit card (processed securely through Stripe). We will get back to you within 24 hours.

Go to the full page to view and submit the form.

Myths about wills

Frequently asked questions.

My two adult children witnessed my will. Is that valid?

The will itself is still valid (if other requirements are met).

However,  a witness cannot also benefit under the will. Any gift to them will lapse.

I suggest you sign a new will, with independent adult witnesses who are not mentioned in the will.

My will is not in hard copy. It is on a computer. Is that valid?

It depends.

Under New Zealand law, to be valid, a will must be in writing and cannot be signed electronically.

If the original will was in hard copy and was signed physically, but was then destroyed after being scanned, the High Court can grant probate of a copy of a destroyed will.  Your executors will have to explain to the court what happened.

It will be simpler for everyone if you sign a new will, on paper.  Make a scanned copy if you like, but keep the original hard copy safe.

My will is handwritten in a notebook. Is that valid?

Yes, if the other requirements have been met.

However, if you own more than $15,000 when you die, or if you own land (other than Maori land), probate will be needed. Your executor/s will have to send your will to the High Court. It will not be returned.

The pages need to stay in the notebook. The whole notebook will have to be sent to the High Court.

It will be simpler for everyone if you sign another will on one or more separate sheets of paper, not in a notebook.

My will has a corrected date on it. Is that valid?

Yes, if the other requirements have been met.

However, if you own more than $15,000 when you die, or have a house or land (other than Maori land), your executors will have to apply for probate. The High Court will want them to confirm that the date change was made at the time the will was signed. The court may want evidence from the witnesses as to the correct date of the will.

It will probably be easier for everyone if you sign a new will.

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