Estate Planning UK 2026 — Wills, LPA, Probate and Inheritance Tax Guide

Best Will Writing Services UK 2026 — Solicitors & Online Compared

Compare the best will writing services in the UK for 2026. Online vs solicitor, costs, what to look for — Farewill, Co-op Legal, Solicitors reviewed.

Around 60% of UK adults do not have a valid will. Without one, your estate is distributed according to the laws of intestacy — which may not reflect your wishes, and can create significant problems for unmarried partners who have no automatic inheritance rights.

Writing a will has never been more accessible — or more affordable. Here is how the main options compare.

Will Writing Services Compared — UK 2026

Service Type Single will Mirror wills Suitable for
Farewill Online £90 £135 Simple-to-moderate estates; good UX
Co-op Legal Services Online + solicitor review £110 £175 Those wanting professional oversight
Willful Online £59 £99 Simple estates; budget option
Slater and Gordon Solicitor £175 £295 Moderate complexity
Hugh James Solicitor £200 £325 Wales; good for property matters
Local high street solicitor Solicitor £150–£300 £250–£500 Complex estates; disputes likely
Will Aid (November only) Solicitor Charitable donation (suggested £100) £180 donation Solicitor-standard at reduced cost
National Free Wills Network Solicitor Free (charity estates only) Free Charitable estate planning

Prices are indicative. Always confirm with the provider before proceeding.

Online Will Writing vs Solicitor — When to Use Each

Situation Online service Solicitor
Simple family structure (married, children) Optional
Unmarried partner — want them to inherit ✓ with care Recommended
Blended family (stepchildren) ✓ with care Recommended
Business interests or agricultural property Essential
Foreign property Essential
Estranged family who might contest Essential
Trust for children under 18 ✓ basic trusts Recommended for complex
Estate worth over £1 million ✓ possible Recommended

What a Will Should Cover

Every well-drafted will should address:

  1. Executor — who will administer your estate (can be the same person as a beneficiary)
  2. Beneficiaries — who receives what, and in what proportions
  3. Residual estate — what happens to anything not specifically named
  4. Contingency gifts — what happens if a beneficiary dies before you
  5. Guardianship — who looks after your minor children
  6. Specific gifts — items of sentimental or financial value you want to direct to specific people
  7. Funeral wishes — preferences (note: not legally binding, but guides executors)
  8. Trusts — if applicable, for children or vulnerable beneficiaries

A will in England or Wales is only valid if:

  • It is in writing (typed or handwritten)
  • You sign it in the presence of two witnesses who are both physically present at the same time
  • Both witnesses sign in your presence
  • Witnesses must not be beneficiaries or the spouse/civil partner of a beneficiary

Scotland is different: Only one witness is required, and there is no requirement for both testator and witness to be present simultaneously.

Cost vs Risk — Worked Example

Tom, 52, has a wife, two adult children from a first marriage, and a small buy-to-let property.

Option Cost Risk level
DIY kit £20 High — self-completion errors common; buy-to-let complicates
Online service £90 Medium — buy-to-let and blended family adds complexity
Solicitor £250 Low — recommended for this situation

The £160 extra for a solicitor here is well spent — a contested or invalid will can cost estates tens of thousands in legal fees.

Free Will Writing — When It’s Available

  • Will Aid (November every year) — solicitors write wills for a charitable donation (~£100 single, £180 mirror). Check willaidsolicitors.org.uk
  • National Free Wills Network — free simple will if you leave a gift to charity. Check freewillsnetwork.org.uk
  • Free Wills Month (March and October) — some solicitors offer free basic wills for over-55s through Free Wills Month. Check freewillsmonth.org.uk

After the Will — Storage

  • Keep the original in a safe place — not in a safe deposit box that only you can access
  • Tell your executor where it is
  • Register it with Certainty (the National Will Register) — costs around £30 and makes it traceable
  • Review your will after any major life event: marriage, divorce, birth of a child, significant change in assets

For other aspects of estate planning see power of attorney guide, how much does probate cost, and inheritance tax guide.

Sources

  1. GOV.UK — Making a will
  2. The Law Society — Find a solicitor
  3. National Free Wills Network