
What to Do After Receiving Your Will
A practical guide to signing, witnessing, and storing your will once it arrives.
Your will has arrived — what now?
Once your will has been drafted and reviewed by a solicitor, you will receive it by email (as a PDF) and by post. It is not legally valid until it has been properly signed and witnessed. This guide covers exactly what you need to do.
Step 1: Read it carefully
Before signing, read your will from start to finish. Check that:
- Your full legal name and address are correct
- The people you have named as beneficiaries, executors, and guardians are right
- The gifts and distributions match what you intended
- There are no typos or errors
If anything is wrong, do not sign it. Contact us and we will arrange a correction.
Step 2: Arrange your witnesses
To be legally valid under the Wills Act 1837, your will must be signed in the presence of two independent adult witnesses (aged 18 or over), who must each sign in your presence.
Who can be a witness?
Any adult who is not:
- A beneficiary named in the will
- The spouse or civil partner of a beneficiary
If a beneficiary or their spouse witnesses the will, that person's gift becomes void — they lose their inheritance. The rest of the will remains valid, but this is an easily avoidable mistake.
Good choices for witnesses include neighbours, colleagues, or friends who are not mentioned in the will.
All three people must be present together
You and both witnesses must all be in the same room at the same time. You sign first, then each witness signs. Do not sign separately or at different times — this can invalidate the will.
Step 3: Sign your will
- Sign using your usual signature at the bottom of the will, in the space provided
- Use a pen (not pencil)
- Both witnesses then sign in the spaces provided, and print their name and address
- Do not use correction fluid or cross anything out — if there is an error, contact us for a corrected version
Step 4: Store your will safely
Once signed, your will is a legal document. The signed original must be kept safe. If it cannot be found after your death, the court may presume you destroyed it intentionally.
Good storage options:
- At home — in a fireproof safe or strongbox, with your important documents
- With a solicitor — many firms offer will storage, sometimes for a small fee
- At a bank — a safe deposit box
- The National Will Register — a registration service that records where your will is stored, making it easier for your executors to find
Wherever you store it, make sure at least one person — ideally your executor — knows where to find it.
Step 5: Tell your executor
Your executor is the person responsible for carrying out your wishes after your death. Make sure they know:
- That you have made a will
- Where the signed original is stored
- Who your solicitor is (if relevant)
You do not need to share the contents of your will with your executor — just enough information for them to find it when the time comes.
Step 6: Keep your digital copy
You will always have access to your digital copy through your GetWill account. This is useful for reference, but it is the signed original that has legal force — not the digital version.
When to update your will
Your will should be reviewed after any major life change:
- Marriage — marriage automatically revokes an existing will in England and Wales
- Divorce — your ex-spouse is treated as having died for the purposes of your will, which may not produce the result you want
- Children — you may want to add guardianship provisions or update distributions
- A death — if a beneficiary or executor dies, your will needs updating
- Buying or selling property — especially if your will makes specific gifts of property
You can log in to your GetWill account at any time to request updates to your will.
Related guides

How to Make a Will in the UK
A step-by-step guide to making a legally valid will in England and Wales, from choosing executors to signing and witnessing.

How to Choose an Executor
What executors do, who to choose, and the common mistakes to avoid when appointing executors in your will.

Your Will-Writing Checklist
Everything you need to prepare before writing your will, from asset lists to executor choices.
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