Fuss-free, systematic, and in-person.
Meet, draft, sign — three clear stages. Your estate planner comes to you for the first meeting, drafts everything electronically, and finalises the Will and LPA together at our partner law firm.
Fuss-free and systematic.
Three clear steps from first meeting to signed Will + LPA. No hidden stages, no surprise fees.
Meet · Draft · Sign — Will and LPA done together at our partner law firm.
- Step 1
Meet your estate planner
We come to a location of your convenience — home, office, café — to talk through your family, your assets, and your wishes for the Will.
At your convenience
- Step 2
Review the first draft
Your draft Will is sent over electronically. Read it on your own time, mark up anything you'd like changed — unlimited edits, no rush.
Unlimited edits
- Step 3
Sign at the law firm
Meet at our partner Singapore law firm for endorsement and signing with two witnesses. Your LPA is completed the same day.
Will + LPA, one visit
What you'll want at hand.
Nothing fancy. Most people have everything in their wallet or a shoebox somewhere. Don't worry about getting it perfect — you can come back and edit.
- Your full name and IC/FIN
- A list of your major assets (HDB, savings, CPF — though CPF is separate)
- Names of beneficiaries (the people or causes you want to look after)
- Names of 1–2 executors (the person who'll carry out your wishes)
- If you have kids: a guardian's name and consent
- Any specific gifts or charitable bequests
Real Singapore cases.
Every story below is a real Singapore court case or news report. Each one shows what happens when a Will, LPA, or asset inventory is missing or unclear — and what a quiet afternoon of planning would have prevented.
- No asset inventory2026
$150m inheritance lost in paperwork for over a decade
A Singapore family struggled for more than 10 years to trace and distribute a S$150 million inheritance. Poor record-keeping, scattered overseas holdings, and tangled corporate structures meant the heirs didn't even know the full list of what their father owned.
Source: The Straits TimesThe lesson
A Will alone isn't enough. Maintain a centralised asset inventory — local and overseas bank accounts, investments, insurance, CPF, properties, company shares — and tell your executor where it lives.
- Unequal distribution2024
Son bequeathed S$1 by mother contests her will — and loses
A mother executed three Wills in succession, each leaving just S$1 to each of her three sons but with different residual beneficiaries. One son challenged the final Will alleging lack of capacity and undue influence. The High Court found the mother knew exactly what she was doing and dismissed the claim.
Source: Channel News AsiaThe lesson
If you intend to disinherit a close family member, document your reasoning carefully and ensure each Will is properly drafted and witnessed. 'Unfair' is not the same as 'invalid' — but the family conflict and legal bills cost everyone.
- Income-producing property2023
Yishun coffee shop rent split between siblings reaches Court of Appeal
A mother's Yishun coffee shop generated steady rental income. After her death, one son claimed a share based on an informal family understanding; his sisters disagreed. The Court of Appeal eventually overturned his win at first instance — ruling ownership had been misunderstood for years.
Source: The Straits TimesThe lesson
Don't rely on informal family arrangements for income-producing property. Spell out in writing who owns what, who collects which income, and on what basis. A Will is one place; a clear lifetime structure is another.
- Later-life remarriage2020
Wife left out of husband's Will loses court bid in 'marriage of convenience'
An elderly man's Will left his much younger wife nothing. After his death, she sued to set the Will aside, claiming a promise of provision. The High Court held that he had testamentary freedom and dismissed her claim.
Source: Channel News AsiaThe lesson
If you want a spouse — especially in a second or later-life marriage — to be protected, you must provide for them explicitly. Marriage alone doesn't guarantee inheritance. A Will, CPF nomination, and possibly a life interest in property are the tools that do.
- Mental capacity (LPA)2024
Mistress contests children's deputyship over 71-year-old dementia patient
A 71-year-old man with dementia had his children appointed as deputies under the Mental Capacity Act. His long-term partner alleged the children weren't acting in his best interests and fought to revoke the deputyship — a dispute that turned ugly in court.
Source: Channel News AsiaThe lesson
An LPA done while you still have capacity puts the decision in your hands, not the court's. For anyone with a complex personal life — blended family, long-term partner outside marriage — an LPA prevents a deputyship fight after capacity is lost.
- Executor friction2024
Widow sues grandson over late retired judge's estate
A retired Supreme Court judge appointed his grandson as executor. After his death, the widow alleged the grandson failed to account for assets and distribute the estate as the Will intended. The family ended up in court — exactly the outcome the Will was meant to prevent.
Source: The Straits TimesThe lesson
Choose an executor who is both trustworthy and competent. For high-value or complex estates, consider naming a professional co-executor. And tell your family who is in charge before you go — surprise rarely helps.
Your loved ones, sheltered. By next week.
Two ways to start — fill in the enquiry form and we'll reach out within 24 hours, or WhatsApp us directly to book your first meeting.
