Short Answer
Every Canadian adult needs a will. Without one, provincial intestacy law — not you — determines what happens to your assets, who raises your children, and who administers your estate. A will is the most basic and accessible form of financial planning available, starting at under $200.
What Happens Without a Will: Province by Province
| Province | Spouse receives from intestate estate | Children receive |
|---|---|---|
| Ontario | First $350,000, then share of remainder | Remainder after preferential share |
| British Columbia | All (if no children); preferential share if children | Share of remainder |
| Alberta | First $150,000, then remainder | Share of remainder beyond preferential share |
| Quebec | 1/3 of estate | 2/3 of estate |
| Other provinces | Similar tiered structures | Varies |
Key point: Common-law spouses have no automatic intestacy rights in Ontario, Alberta, BC (unless registered), or most other provinces. Without a will, a partner of 10 years may receive nothing.
Why Everyone Needs a Will
| Reason | Impact without a will |
|---|---|
| Asset distribution | Province decides, not you |
| Minor children’s guardian | Court appoints — may not match your wishes |
| Executor of choice | Court appoints administrator |
| Specific gifts | Cannot direct specific items to specific people |
| Common-law partner | May receive nothing in many provinces |
| Estate administration speed | Intestacy probate takes longer and costs more |
| Avoiding family conflict | Will creates clarity; no will creates disputes |
What a Will Must Include
| Required element | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Identification of testator | Your full legal name and address |
| Executor designation | Who administers your estate — pays debts, files taxes, distributes assets |
| Beneficiary designations | Who receives what |
| Guardian designation (if minor children) | Who raises your children |
| Residual estate clause | What happens to anything not specifically mentioned |
| Date and signature | Required for validity |
| Witnesses | Two independent witnesses required in most provinces (not beneficiaries) |
Will vs Beneficiary Designations vs Joint Ownership
| Asset type | How it transfers on death |
|---|---|
| TFSA | Passes to named successor holder or beneficiary — does not go through will |
| RRSP/RRIF | Passes to named beneficiary — does not go through will |
| Life insurance | Passes to named beneficiary — does not go through will |
| Jointly held assets (joint tenancy) | Pass to surviving owner by right of survivorship — bypasses will |
| Bank accounts (with named beneficiary in applicable provinces) | Direct transfer |
| Everything else (investment accounts, real property held alone, personal property) | Governed by your will |
A will governs only your “estate” — assets without a valid beneficiary designation or survivorship mechanism. Keep named beneficiaries current on registered accounts and life insurance to ensure those assets transfer efficiently.
Powers of Attorney: The Other Documents You Need
| Document | What it does | Activates when |
|---|---|---|
| Continuing power of attorney for property | Authorizes someone to manage finances if incapacitated | While you are alive but mentally incapacitated |
| Personal care directive / health care proxy | Directs medical care, life support decisions | While you are alive but unable to communicate |
| Will | Distributes your estate | On death only |
Without a POA, your family may need to go to court to manage your affairs if you are incapacitated — an expensive and stressful process that a simple document prevents.
How to Get a Will
| Method | Cost range | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Lawyer | $300–$600 (simple single will) | Complex estates, business, trusts |
| Notary (Quebec) | $200–$500 | Quebec-specific notarial will |
| Online platform (Willful, Epilog) | $99–$199 | Simple estates, clear wishes |
| DIY (kit / self-drafted) | $0–$50 | High risk — errors create problems |
| Legal aid (low income) | Free or low cost | Income-qualified individuals |
Online will platforms produce legally valid wills and have seen rapid adoption in Canada. They are appropriate for straightforward situations; if you have a business, a blended family, significant assets, or a trust requirement, a lawyer is worth the cost.
When to Update Your Will
| Life event | Update required |
|---|---|
| Marriage | Yes — marriage revokes prior wills in most provinces |
| Divorce | Yes — divorce revokes gifts to former spouse in most provinces |
| Birth or adoption of child | Yes — add guardianship, update distribution |
| Death of named executor or beneficiary | Yes — update to current people |
| Major asset change (home purchase, business, inheritance) | Review and update if distribution changes |
| International move | Review — will may need local adaptation |
| Different province | Review — intestacy and probate rules vary |
Bottom Line
A will is the most fundamental document in any adult’s financial life. Every Canadian over 18 should have one regardless of asset level — but especially parents of minor children, common-law partners, and anyone with a clear view of who should or should not receive their estate. The cost is low, online options have made it accessible, and the consequences of dying without one are both legally and emotionally costly for the people left behind.