Last Will and Testament

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Last Will & Testament — Contents Checklist

A structured checklist of common will provisions. Use this as a drafting or review guide.

Quick essentials

  • Appointment of Executor(s)
  • Guardianship for minor children (if applicable)
  • Specific bequests (items or cash)
  • Residuary estate clause (distribution of remainder)
  • Signature, witnesses, and formalities

1. Opening & Formalities

Common elements to establish the will's validity and intent.

  • Declaration of identity and testamentary intent ("This is my last will...")
  • Revocation of prior wills and codicils
  • Statement of capacity and voluntary execution

2. Appointment of Fiduciaries

  • Executor(s): name primary and alternates.
  • Trustee(s): for any testamentary trusts.
  • Guardian(s): for minor children or dependents (and alternates).
  • Agent for digital assets: optional person to manage online accounts/crypto.

3. Funeral & Burial Wishes

  • Preference for burial, cremation, or donation of body/organs.
  • Requested ceremony type, location of burial/ashes, or music/rituals.
  • Note: these are often put in a separate non-binding letter of wishes, since wills may not be read immediately.

4. Payment of Debts & Expenses

  • Instructions to pay funeral, medical, and administration costs.
  • Order of payment: tax debts, secured debts, unsecured debts.
  • Whether debts reduce specific gifts or are paid from the residue.

5. Specific Bequests

Detailed gifts to named beneficiaries.

  • Tangible personal property (jewelry, heirlooms, artwork).
  • Cash legacies (specific monetary amounts).
  • Business interests, shares, or partnership interests.
  • Digital assets (cryptocurrency, domains, social accounts) — include access instructions if appropriate.
  • Pet gifts: naming a caregiver and allocating funds for ongoing care.

6. Real Property Dispositions

  • Specific transfer of real estate to named beneficiaries.
  • Option to sell and divide proceeds, or hold property in trust.
  • Life estate arrangements (e.g., give a spouse lifetime use, remainder to children).

7. Residuary Estate Clause

Disposition of whatever remains after specific gifts, debts, and expenses.

  • Commonly to spouse, children, or in equal shares to named beneficiaries.
  • Can direct a percentage to charities or to create a fund.

8. Trust Provisions

  • Testamentary trust for minors: delay distributions until a stated age or milestone.
  • Spendthrift or protective trust: protects beneficiaries from creditors or poor money management.
  • Education or maintenance trusts: funds earmarked for schooling, health or support.
  • Charitable trust: ongoing gifts or endowments directed by the will.

9. Contingency Provisions

  • Alternate beneficiaries if a named beneficiary predeceases the testator.
  • Per stirpes vs. per capita distribution choices (how descendants inherit).
  • Disaster or simultaneous death clauses (e.g., common disaster provisions).

10. No-Contest / In Terrorem Clause

A clause designed to discourage beneficiaries from challenging the will by threatening forfeiture of their gift if they contest.

11. Business Succession & Shared Assets

  • Instructions for transferring business ownership, management roles, or sale proceeds.
  • Buy-sell triggers or direction to co-owners.

12. Digital & Online Asset Management

  • List of digital accounts, keys, and passwords (consider secure storage and reference rather than embedding in the will).
  • Direction on social media, email, and cryptocurrency.

13. Personal Messages & Letters of Wishes

Non-binding messages, moral wishes, or practical notes (often placed in a separate letter to beneficiaries).

14. Signatures, Witnesses & Notarization

  • Testator signature in presence of required number of witnesses.
  • Witness signatures, names, addresses and dates (local law varies).
  • Notarial attestation where required or desired for extra proof.

This checklist is informational only and does not constitute legal advice. Consult a qualified estate lawyer in your jurisdiction when drafting a will.

  

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