Start your will

Let's get your wishes down.

This takes about ten minutes. You'll answer a few plain questions, one at a time, and at the end you'll get a clear summary of your wishes to review.

  • No jargon. Everything is in ordinary language.
  • Nothing is final yet. You're recording your wishes — the signing comes later.
  • Have handy: the full names of the people you want to include.
A quick, honest note. Willkeeper helps you organise your wishes. It isn't legal advice, and the summary you'll get isn't a valid will on its own — a will only takes effect once it's properly drafted, signed, and witnessed. If your situation is complex, speak with a WA solicitor.
Article I · About you

Tell us who you are

This identifies you as the person making the will.

Article II · Executor

Who will carry out your wishes?

Your executor handles everything after you're gone — paying debts and passing on what you leave. Choose someone you trust and who's willing to take it on.

Article III · Guardians

Do you have children under 18?

If you do, you can name who cares for them. For many parents this is the single most important part of a will.

Article IV · Beneficiaries

Who receives what?

Name the people or causes you want to leave things to, and roughly what each should receive — a share, an amount, or "the rest of my estate".

Article V · Specific gifts Optional

Any particular items to pass on?

A ring, a car, a keepsake, a set sum of money. List anything you want to go to a specific person. Skip this if nothing comes to mind.

Final wishes Optional

Anything you'd like your family to know?

Your funeral preferences and any personal notes. Optional — but often a real kindness to those left behind.

Last step · Review

Here's what you've told us

Check it over. You can go back and change anything. When it looks right, print or save this summary to take forward.