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Comprehensive Wills – Years Of Experience, Manchester

Easy Wills provide professional will writing services via a 24/7 online service. Qualified lawyers, customer-focused approach - fill out our form to get started.

Competitive Prices 

Highest Standards 

Highly Knowledgeable

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Comprehensive Will Options For Every Situation

We offer a comprehensive will as a sole service or as mirror wills for an additional £10. This option is particularly suited if you have more than one beneficiary and need to make clear arrangements for how your estate will be distributed. Our approach allows you to provide detailed instructions, ensuring that your estate is divided fairly and that all your wishes are legally documented by a qualified lawyer with precision and care. Reach out today to explore your options.

Flexibility With Gifts And Trusts

Our form allows you to outline specific gifts, personal items, or financial arrangements for your chosen beneficiaries. With this option, you can also establish simple trusts to provide for children, helping ensure that their care and security are protected for the future. Every will is prepared by a qualified lawyer, so you can be confident that your instructions will be legally enforceable, accurate, and tailored to your personal requirements.

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Guidance And Reliable Turnaround

To make the process easier, each will comes with a ‘What to do next’ booklet and a secure will envelope for safe storage. After you complete the form, we will prepare your will and send it to you together with a guidance leaflet. Our turnaround times are typically 7–14 days, meaning your estate planning is managed within a clear timeframe. This structured process ensures peace of mind alongside efficiency and professionalism throughout.

Last Will and Testament

Please use this form to give us the information we will need to complete your Will. We will also include the necessary legal wording to make your Will effective. You don’t need to know everything that goes into a Will, you just need to let us know what you’d like it to say. Questions marked with a red asterisk must be answered.

Please choose your product

For a Will for just one person choose Single Will, or for two Wills that leave everything to each other or to the same beneficiary choose Mirror Wills.

What’s your full name at the moment, including any middle names and names you might be commonly known as? Please also let us know your preferred title.

What’s your date of birth? Please give day, month and year.

Please give the address you currently live at. We will use this to send out your Will once we’ve written it. You don’t necessarily have to change your Will if you change your address in future, however some people choose to update their Will if they move.

Marital status

Please let us know your marital status. Please note that from a legal standpoint cohabiting counts as being single.

If you are married or in a civil partnership please give us your spouse or civil partner’s name, preferred title, date or birth, and address.

How many Executors will you have?

The Executor of a Will is the person named in it who is given the job of putting your wishes into practice.  They effectively take your place after you’ve passed away in dealing with your property and estate. You need to name at least one Executor, and you should get their agreement to act for you.  You can have more than one Executor, and our form allows you to name up to four.
Anyone over the age of 18 who is mentally and physically capable of performing the role can be an Executor, so you can name family members, friends, or get a professional to act for you, who would charge a fee to your estate.
The Executor has some leeway in deciding on how to deal with your estate, including how quickly it’s done, so you should choose someone who you believe will do the best job.

Executors' roles

If you name more than one Executor you’ll have to decide whether you want them to act all together, which we call “jointly”, or if you want to name one with a list of replacements, in which case you’d name them in the order you want them to act.  What we mean by that is the first named Executor would act fully and on their own, unless they were unwilling or incapable of acting for you.  At this point the role would fall on the next named Executor, and so on. There’s also the option to have joint Executors acting “severally”, which is the legal term that means they don’t have to make decisions together and can act as if they’re all sole Executors.
 There’s no right or wrong answer to how you want them to act – it’s just whatever you feel is best.

Please give the name and address of your Executor(s). You might also want to give their date of birth if you know it. If you’re naming more than one, give them in the order in which you want them to act, as we will write your Will in the order which you give them here. Please remember that we don’t offer a service where we will act as your Executor.

If you have children who are under the age of 18 when you sign your Will you should give their full details here and indicate who should take responsibility for looking after them, and what money there will be, if any, for their upkeep.  We can write a Trust into your Will that will grant the named Guardian(s) of your children the power to use funds from your estate to look after them. Leave blank if you don’t have children under 18.

Any children who have reached 18 years old when you pass away won’t need care, but that doesn’t invalidate any other part of your Will.  If they have become adults you might want to consider also making them a specific gift as an alternative to specifying care arrangements.
You should also tell us what you want to happen if some of your children are under 18 and some are over 18. For example, you might want your estate split into equal shares for each child, with those over 18 inheriting immediately, and those under 18 having their share held in Trust by their Guardian. 
You may also want to consider what would happen to the share of a child who dies before you, but who leaves children of their own who could inherit in their place. Leave blank if you have no children under 18.

Specific named gifts are called “bequests”.  You should put together a list of the gifts you want to make, and write them in this section in the order in which you’d want them to be made, as that’s how we’ll write them in your Will. You can also write what you want to happen to the gift if the person you leave it to can’t receive it, for instance if they’ve passed away before you. 
If your Executor can’t fulfil a gift from your estate that gift will fail but it won’t invalidate the rest of your Will.  The space on the form will expand so you’re not limited to just the box on the page – there’s plenty of room for you to list your bequests however you see fit. Leave blank if you have no specific gifts in mind.

Anything that’s not included as part of a specific gift is called your “residual estate”.  You’ll need to think about which person should receive this.  Bear in mind that this will happen after everything else in the process has occurred, such as paying out gifts, fees and taxes, so the amount left over might be a lot, a little or nothing at all.  If you want someone to receive something specific please use the bequests section on the form. Please indicate “each other” or a single other joint beneficiary if choosing Mirror Wills.

This is an optional section for if you want to make charitable donations.  You’ll need to specify the name, address and charity registration number for the organisation you’ve chosen, and you can choose more than one, in the order in which you want the gifts to be given.  Please specify the amount of the gift. You should indicate whether these gifts should be given before the other specific gifts you’re making, or after.  If you don’t specify which we’ll write your Will assuming that charitable donations come after other specific gifts and arrangements for children, but before your residual estate is given out. Leave blank if you aren’t leaving a gift to charity.

This section allows you to record your funeral wishes. Please keep in mind that most Wills are dealt with after funerals are arranged, so while you can write your wishes here you should also discuss them with the people in your life who will arrange your funeral.  Your funeral is frequently paid for from your estate, so if you have made your own arrangements, for instance a pre-paid funeral plan or insurance policy, it’s best to make that clear here. Additionally, the UK operates an “opt out” system for organ donations.  If you don’t want to be an organ donor you should tell your family, and you can also write it here.  Please be aware that organ donations must happen immediately after you pass away, so writing it in your Will alone may not prevent it. Leave blank if you have no specific wishes.

If you have policies or accounts that you want to bring to your Executor’s attention you can note them here. This field is optional, so please leave blank if you don’t have policies or accounts, or if you’ll let your Executor know about them separately to your Will.

Please give the name and address of anyone you would like to be notified that you’ve died. You can list more than one person. Leave blank if you don’t have anyone specific you’d like to tell.

Personal Data / GDPR Agreement*

Please tick this box to agree to having the data you enter in this form stored on our system in order to produce your Will. Full details of how we handle data can be found in our Privacy Policy, which is linked below. You agree that if you are obtaining Mirror Wills this single agreement covers both parties.

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