When a loved one passes away, dealing with their estate can be a challenging task. If a will cannot be found, it can complicate matters significantly. In England and Wales, if a person dies without a valid will — or their will cannot be located — their estate is distributed according to the rules of intestacy, a rigid set of legal rules that take no account of the deceased’s actual wishes or relationships.
We understand that navigating these rules can be daunting. The absence of a will means the estate will be divided based on a predetermined legal formula. An unmarried partner of 30 years, for example, would receive nothing. A stepchild who was raised from infancy would inherit nothing. The intestacy rules only recognise specific blood relatives and legally recognised spouses or civil partners. Understanding the legal implications of a missing will is essential to managing the estate effectively — and to preventing the same situation from arising in your own family.
Key Takeaways
- If a will is not found, the estate is distributed according to the rigid rules of intestacy — not the deceased’s wishes.
- Unmarried partners, stepchildren, friends, and charities receive nothing under intestacy.
- A surviving spouse does not automatically inherit the entire estate if there are children.
- The rules of intestacy provide a fixed legal framework with no room for discretion or individual circumstances.
- Seeking professional guidance early can help navigate the complexities and avoid costly disputes.
- Planning ahead — through a will and ideally a lifetime trust — prevents these problems entirely.
Understanding the Importance of a Will
When it comes to estate planning, a will plays a pivotal role in determining the distribution of your assets after you’re gone. But it’s not just about clarity — there are serious legal and financial consequences when someone dies without one. Around 60% of UK adults still don’t have a will, which means the majority of estates are at risk of falling into intestacy.
The Role of a Will in Estate Planning
A will is a legally binding document that outlines how you want your estate to be distributed among your beneficiaries. It allows you to appoint executors who will ensure your wishes are carried out. Without a will, the distribution of your estate is left entirely to the laws of intestacy, which follow a rigid hierarchy that may bear no resemblance to your actual relationships or wishes.
The key benefits of having a will include:
- Control over exactly who inherits your assets — and who doesn’t
- Appointment of guardians for minor children (without a will, the court decides)
- Minimisation of disputes among family members by making your intentions clear
- Potential to reduce your inheritance tax (IHT) liability through careful planning — for example, leaving 10% or more of your net estate to charity reduces the IHT rate from 40% to 36%
- The ability to include funeral wishes, specific gifts, and charitable legacies

Legal Implications of Dying Without a Will
Dying without a will — known as dying “intestate” — means the intestacy rules of England and Wales will dictate how your estate is distributed. These rules follow a strict hierarchy, and the results can be deeply unfair to the people you actually cared about most:
| Scenario | Intestacy Rules | Potential Outcome |
|---|---|---|
| Married with children | Spouse receives personal possessions, the first £322,000, and half the remainder. Children share the other half equally | The surviving spouse may not inherit the family home outright if the estate is large enough. This can force a property sale |
| Unmarried partner (cohabiting) | No automatic inheritance — regardless of how long you lived together | Unmarried partner receives nothing and may need to make a costly court claim under the Inheritance (Provision for Family and Dependants) Act 1975 |
| No spouse or children | Estate passes to parents, then siblings, then half-siblings, then grandparents, then aunts/uncles | Close friends, stepchildren, and long-term carers receive nothing. If no qualifying relative exists, the estate passes to the Crown (bona vacantia) |
The legal implications of dying without a will can be severe. During the probate process — which typically takes 3 to 12 months, and longer if property needs to be sold — all sole-name bank accounts, investments, and property are frozen. Nobody can access them. This can cause real financial hardship for the surviving family, on top of the emotional toll of bereavement. Having a will is the absolute minimum — and combining it with a lifetime trust offers even stronger protection, because trust assets bypass the probate process entirely and can be accessed by trustees immediately.
Situations Where a Will Cannot Be Found
In England and Wales, the inability to locate a will can lead to a complex and potentially contentious estate settlement. When a family member passes away, finding their will becomes an immediate priority. However, this task can be surprisingly difficult, especially if the deceased never told anyone where the original document was stored — or even that one existed.
Many wills go missing simply because they weren’t stored securely enough, or because the deceased never informed their executors or beneficiaries of the location. Sometimes a will is stored in a drawer, a filing cabinet, or even a book — and family members searching under pressure simply miss it. This lack of communication is one of the most common causes of estate complications in the UK.
Family Members’ Involvement in Searching
Family members play a crucial role in searching for a missing will. They are often the ones who initiate the search and become involved in the estate administration process. We recommend starting with the following steps:
- Searching the deceased’s home thoroughly — including desks, filing cabinets, safes, lofts, and among personal papers.
- Contacting the deceased’s solicitor — many solicitors hold original wills in safe storage, and the Law Society’s “Find a Will” service can help trace which firm may hold it.
- Checking with the deceased’s bank — some banks offer will storage services in safe deposit boxes.
- Searching the National Will Register (Certainty) — a voluntary registration service that over 10 million wills are registered on.
- Contacting the Principal Probate Registry — to check if a previous will was ever lodged for safekeeping (though this is uncommon).
- Asking friends, neighbours, and other relatives if the deceased ever mentioned making a will.
It’s essential for family members to work together and share any information they have to ensure a thorough search.
Common Scenarios Leading to a Missing Will
There are several common scenarios that can lead to a will going missing:
- The will was kept at home in an insecure location and was accidentally discarded or destroyed (e.g., in a house clearance after death).
- The deceased made a will but never told anyone — family members had no idea it existed.
- The will was lost during a house move, downsizing, or reorganisation of papers.
- The solicitor who drafted the will has since retired, merged with another firm, or closed — and the file was not properly transferred.
- The deceased destroyed an earlier will intending to make a new one, but never got around to it — creating an intestacy situation.

Understanding these scenarios highlights the importance of not just making a will, but telling your executors where it is. Better still, store it with your solicitor or in a professional will storage facility and ensure at least two trusted people know its location. By taking these simple precautions, you can ensure your estate is handled according to your wishes — not left to the intestacy rules.
What Happens to Your Estate Without a Will?
The absence of a will triggers the intestacy rules of England and Wales, which impose a rigid formula on how your estate is divided. There is no room for discretion, no consideration of individual circumstances, and no recognition of relationships that don’t fit the legal hierarchy. It is, quite simply, a one-size-fits-all approach to something deeply personal.
Intestacy Laws in the UK
The intestacy rules are set out in the Administration of Estates Act 1925 (as amended). They create a strict hierarchy of beneficiaries, and only people who fall within that hierarchy can inherit. Everyone else — no matter how close their relationship with the deceased — receives nothing.
The key principles are:
- If there is a surviving spouse or civil partner and no children, the spouse inherits the entire estate.
- If there is a surviving spouse and children, the spouse receives all personal possessions, the first £322,000 (the statutory legacy), and half of the remaining estate. The children share the other half equally.
- If there is no spouse but there are children, the children inherit everything equally.
- If there are no spouse and no children, the estate passes down a strict hierarchy: parents → siblings (full blood) → half-siblings → grandparents → aunts and uncles → half-aunts and half-uncles. If no qualifying relatives exist, the estate passes to the Crown as bona vacantia.
Here’s a simplified overview of how assets are distributed under the intestacy rules:
| Surviving Relatives | Distribution of Estate |
|---|---|
| Spouse or Civil Partner only (no children) | The entire estate goes to the spouse or civil partner. |
| Spouse or Civil Partner and Children | Spouse receives personal possessions, the first £322,000, and half the remainder. Children share the other half equally (held on statutory trust until age 18). |
| Children only (no spouse) | The estate is divided equally among the children. If a child has predeceased, their share passes to their children (the deceased’s grandchildren) by representation. |
Distribution of Assets to Heirs
The distribution of assets under intestacy can produce results that the deceased would never have wanted. The rules can lead to outcomes that are entirely at odds with the deceased’s wishes, had they been given the chance to express them in a will.
For instance, a spouse may inherit the majority of the estate, but the presence of children from a previous relationship can complicate this considerably. If the estate is worth more than £322,000 — and with the average home in England now worth around £290,000, many families exceed this threshold — the surviving spouse may not receive enough to keep the family home. Meanwhile, unmarried partners, stepchildren, and close friends are left with nothing at all, regardless of the closeness of their relationship.
This is exactly why planning ahead matters. While intestacy rules provide a basic framework, they lack any personal touch. A properly drafted will — and ideally a lifetime trust — ensures that the people you care about are properly provided for, and that your assets aren’t divided by a formula created for the “average” family that may look nothing like yours. As Mike Pugh says, “plan, don’t panic” — and make sure your family never has to deal with the rigid intestacy rules.
The Role of the Probate Registry in Missing Wills
When a will is lost or cannot be found, the Probate Registry oversees the process of granting authority to administer the estate. It’s important to understand that in England and Wales, this isn’t a court hearing in the traditional sense — it’s an administrative process handled by the Probate Registry (a branch of the Family Division of the High Court).
When there’s no will, the estate administration process becomes more complex. An administrator must be appointed to manage the estate, and the person entitled to apply follows a strict order of priority — typically starting with the surviving spouse or civil partner, then children, then other relatives.
Grant of Letters of Administration
A Grant of Letters of Administration is the legal document issued by the Probate Registry that authorises the appointed administrator to deal with the deceased’s estate. It is the equivalent of a Grant of Probate (which is issued when there is a valid will). Without this grant, banks, building societies, and the Land Registry will not release assets or transfer property.
To obtain a Grant of Letters of Administration, the applicant must:
- Complete the relevant application forms (this can now be done online in many cases)
- Provide a death certificate
- Confirm that no valid will exists (or that it cannot be located despite thorough searches)
- Complete an inheritance tax return for HMRC (even if no IHT is due)
- Pay a nominal court fee
- Swear or affirm that they will administer the estate in accordance with the law
We understand that this process can feel overwhelming during a period of grief, but following the correct legal procedures is essential to avoid disputes or personal liability for the administrator.
How the Probate Registry Determines Intestacy
If no will can be found, there is a legal presumption that the deceased either never made one or destroyed it with the intention of revoking it. This presumption can be rebutted — for example, if a copy of the will exists and there is evidence that the original was lost rather than deliberately destroyed, the Probate Registry may accept the copy with supporting evidence (typically a statutory declaration from someone with knowledge of the circumstances).
If intestacy is confirmed, the Probate Registry applies the intestacy rules and the estate is distributed accordingly. Key steps in the process include:
- Confirming which relatives survive the deceased and their order of priority under the intestacy hierarchy
- Identifying and valuing all assets and liabilities in the estate
- Settling any debts, including inheritance tax (IHT is charged at 40% on the taxable estate above the nil rate band of £325,000 per person — a threshold that has been frozen since 2009 and will remain frozen until at least April 2031)
- Distributing the remaining assets according to the intestacy hierarchy
By understanding how the Probate Registry handles estates without a will, families can navigate the process more confidently — and take steps to ensure their own estates are properly planned to avoid the same outcome.
Steps to Take if You Can’t Locate a Will
Locating a will after someone’s passing can be genuinely difficult — here’s a practical guide to what you should do if you can’t find it. When a will is missing, the clock is still ticking: assets are frozen, bills still need to be paid, and the family is left in limbo. Taking the right steps quickly can make a significant difference.
Conducting a Thorough Search
The first step is to conduct a methodical and thorough search. Don’t just check the obvious places — many wills are found in unexpected locations. Key actions include:
- Search the home systematically — check desks, filing cabinets, safes, wardrobes, bedside drawers, bookshelves, and any lockable storage. Wills have been found inside books, behind picture frames, and in kitchen drawers.
- Ask family members and close friends — someone may know the deceased made a will or where they kept important documents.
- Contact the deceased’s solicitor — if you know which solicitor they used, contact them directly. If you don’t know, try the Law Society’s “Find a Will” service or search the National Will Register (Certainty), which has over 10 million registered wills.
- Contact the deceased’s bank — some banks offer safe deposit box services where original wills may be stored.
- Write to the Probate Registry — you can search for any wills previously deposited for safekeeping, and you can also check if a previous Grant was issued (which would confirm an earlier will existed).
- Place a statutory notice — under the Trustee Act 1925, you can place a notice in the London Gazette and a local newspaper, giving creditors and potential beneficiaries at least two months to come forward. This protects administrators from personal liability for claims they didn’t know about.
By taking these steps, you can demonstrate that a reasonable and diligent effort has been made to locate the will — which is important if you later need to apply for Letters of Administration on the basis that no will exists.

Involving a Solicitor for Legal Assistance
If your own search efforts are unsuccessful, it’s strongly advisable to instruct a solicitor who specialises in probate and estate administration. They can conduct more advanced searches and guide you through the legal process of administering an estate without a will.
A solicitor can assist with:
| Service | Description |
|---|---|
| Will Search Services | Conducting professional searches through the National Will Register, local solicitors’ firms, and will storage providers on your behalf. |
| Application for Grant of Letters of Administration | Preparing and submitting the application to the Probate Registry, including the inheritance tax return to HMRC. |
| Intestacy Guidance | Advising on who is entitled to inherit under the intestacy rules and calculating each beneficiary’s share. |
| Dispute Resolution | Assisting in resolving any disputes that may arise among potential beneficiaries — including claims under the Inheritance (Provision for Family and Dependants) Act 1975. |
Involving a specialist solicitor can significantly ease the process and help protect the administrator from personal liability for mistakes in the estate distribution.
Making a Statutory Declaration
A statutory declaration is a formal legal statement that can play an important role when the original will has been lost or destroyed. It is particularly useful when a copy of the will exists but the original cannot be found — because under English law, if the original will was last known to be in the deceased’s possession and cannot be found after death, there is a legal presumption that the deceased destroyed it with the intention of revoking it.
What a Statutory Declaration Entails
A statutory declaration is a written statement of facts, sworn or affirmed before a solicitor, commissioner for oaths, or other authorised person. In the context of a missing will, it typically includes:
- The circumstances under which the will was made — who drafted it, when, and where
- Where the original will was last known to be stored
- The efforts that have been made to locate the original
- The reasons why the declarant believes the will was lost rather than intentionally destroyed — this is the critical point
- Details of the will’s contents, supported by a copy if one exists
The Probate Registry may accept a copy of the will and grant probate on the basis of it, provided the statutory declaration and supporting evidence are sufficiently compelling. This is not guaranteed — each case is assessed on its own merits.
When and How to Use a Statutory Declaration
A statutory declaration is used when you want to prove the existence and contents of a will that cannot be produced in its original form. To use one effectively:
- Gather all available evidence — copies of the will, correspondence with the solicitor who drafted it, witness statements from people who saw the original, and any other documentation.
- Prepare a detailed statement explaining the circumstances — why you believe the will was lost rather than deliberately revoked, where it was stored, and what searches have been conducted.
- Have the statement sworn or affirmed before a solicitor or commissioner for oaths — making a false statutory declaration is a criminal offence, so accuracy is essential.
- Submit the declaration to the Probate Registry along with the application for a Grant of Probate and any supporting evidence, including a copy of the will.
By making a statutory declaration supported by strong evidence, you may be able to rebut the presumption of destruction and have the estate distributed according to the deceased’s will rather than the intestacy rules. However, this is a complex area of law, and professional legal advice is strongly recommended.
Alternative Options for Estate Distribution
The experience of losing a will — or discovering a loved one never made one — highlights a fundamental weakness of relying on a will alone. Wills can be lost, challenged, damaged, or revoked by marriage. They also go through probate, which means delays, frozen assets, and a public record of the estate. This is where trusts come into their own as a far more robust planning tool.
Trusts as an Alternative to Wills
A lifetime trust is a legal arrangement where you transfer assets to trustees during your lifetime. Those assets are then held and managed by the trustees for the benefit of your chosen beneficiaries. It’s important to understand that a trust is not a separate legal entity — it is a legal arrangement where the trustees become the legal owners, holding the assets for the beneficiaries’ benefit. Crucially, assets held in a properly structured trust bypass the probate process entirely — trustees can act immediately on the settlor’s death, without waiting months for a Grant of Probate. There are no frozen accounts, no delays, and no public record of what was in the trust.
Estate planning services can help you establish a trust tailored to your family’s needs. England invented trust law over 800 years ago — and it remains one of the most powerful legal tools available to ordinary families today. As Mike Pugh says, “trusts are not just for the rich — they’re for the smart.”
In the UK, trusts are primarily classified as either lifetime trusts (created during your lifetime) or will trusts (created through your will and taking effect on death). The most common types include:
| Type of Trust | Description | Benefits |
|---|---|---|
| Discretionary Trust | Trustees have full discretion over how and when to distribute income and capital to beneficiaries. No beneficiary has a fixed right to anything — this is the key protection mechanism | Protects against care fees, divorce, bankruptcy, and family disputes. Can last up to 125 years. By far the most common type of trust used in UK estate planning — accounting for the vast majority of family trusts |
| Interest in Possession Trust | An income beneficiary (life tenant) receives the use of trust property or its income during their lifetime. Capital passes to a remainderman on the life tenant’s death | Commonly used in will trusts to protect a surviving spouse while ensuring children ultimately inherit — preventing sideways disinheritance. Post-March 2006 lifetime interest in possession trusts are generally treated as relevant property for IHT purposes unless they qualify as an immediate post-death interest (IPDI) or disabled person’s interest |
| Bare Trust | The beneficiary has an absolute right to the capital and income at age 18. The trustee is simply a nominee holding legal title | Simple structure, but offers no asset protection — the beneficiary can demand the assets at 18 under the principle in Saunders v Vautier. Not suitable for IHT planning or care fee protection |
The Potential for Legal Disputes Among Heirs
The intestacy rules are rigid, and in practice, this rigidity often causes disputes. Family members may disagree about who should administer the estate, how assets should be valued, or whether the intestacy distribution is fair. In blended families — where there are stepchildren, children from previous relationships, or long-term unmarried partners — the potential for conflict is even higher, because the intestacy rules simply ignore these relationships.
Clear planning and professional guidance are the most effective ways to prevent these disputes from arising in the first place. To minimise the risk of legal disputes, consider:
- Making a will — and telling your executors where it is stored
- Setting up a lifetime trust to protect your most valuable assets (particularly your home) outside the probate process entirely — a discretionary lifetime trust means that even if a will is lost or challenged, your most important assets are already protected
- Maintaining open dialogue with your family about your wishes — and putting those wishes in writing through a letter of wishes alongside your trust deed
- Seeking advice from a specialist in inheritance tax planning and asset protection — not a generalist, because the law, like medicine, is broad. You wouldn’t want your GP doing surgery
- Considering mediation or other alternative dispute resolution methods if disagreements do arise — court proceedings should always be a last resort
By understanding the alternatives available and taking proactive steps now, you can ensure that your estate is distributed according to your wishes — not left to a 100-year-old formula that knows nothing about your family.
Understand Your Rights as an Heir
If someone dies without a will in England and Wales, it’s essential to understand your entitlements under the intestacy rules — and equally important to know what you’re not entitled to. The rules are strict, and they don’t account for emotional bonds, promises made, or financial dependency. Only certain categories of people can inherit, and the hierarchy is inflexible.
Rights Under Intestacy Rules
When there’s no will, the estate is distributed according to the Rules of Intestacy. These rules prioritise certain family members in a fixed order:
- Spouse or civil partner: If there are no children, the spouse inherits everything. If there are children, the spouse receives personal possessions, the first £322,000 (the statutory legacy), and half of the remaining estate. The children share the other half equally.
- Children: If there is no surviving spouse, the estate is divided equally among the children. If a child has predeceased, their share passes to their own children (the deceased’s grandchildren) — this is called “representation.”
- Other relatives: If there are no spouse and no children, the estate passes down the hierarchy: parents → siblings → half-siblings → grandparents → aunts/uncles → half-aunts/half-uncles.
- The Crown: If absolutely no qualifying relatives exist, the estate passes to the Crown, the Duchy of Lancaster, or the Duchy of Cornwall as bona vacantia.
Crucially, the following people have NO automatic right to inherit under intestacy: unmarried partners (regardless of how long they cohabited), stepchildren, friends, carers, and charities.
For detailed information on who can inherit if someone dies without a will, you can visit the GOV.UK website for the full guidance.
Claiming Against an Estate
If you believe you have not been reasonably provided for — whether under the intestacy rules or under the terms of a will — you may be able to make a claim under the Inheritance (Provision for Family and Dependants) Act 1975. This applies to certain categories of people, including:
- A spouse or civil partner of the deceased
- A former spouse who has not remarried
- A cohabitant who lived with the deceased as a spouse for at least two years immediately before death
- A child of the deceased (including adult children in certain circumstances)
- Any person who was being maintained, wholly or partly, by the deceased immediately before death
To make a successful claim, you must demonstrate that the estate’s distribution — whether under a will or the intestacy rules — does not make reasonable financial provision for you. The claim must generally be brought within six months of the Grant of Probate or Letters of Administration being issued, although late applications may be permitted in exceptional circumstances with the court’s permission.
Key Considerations for Claiming Against an Estate:
- Understanding the legal grounds for your claim and which category of applicant you fall into
- Gathering evidence to support your claim — financial records, evidence of dependency, correspondence, and witness statements
- Seeking professional legal advice early — these claims are time-sensitive and the process can be complex and emotionally draining
- Considering whether mediation might resolve the dispute without the cost and stress of court proceedings
For more information on why planning ahead is so important, you can read our article on the importance of having a will in the UK.
The Process of Writing a New Will
If you’re reading this article because a loved one’s will couldn’t be found — or because you realise you don’t have one yourself — the single most important thing you can do right now is make a will. And once you’ve done that, consider going further with a lifetime trust to protect your most valuable assets from probate delays, care fees, inheritance tax, and family disputes. Not losing the family money provides the greatest peace of mind above all else.
Updating Your Will
It’s essential to keep your will up to date, especially after significant life events. In England and Wales, marriage automatically revokes a previous will unless the will was made in contemplation of that specific marriage. Divorce does not revoke a will, but it does treat the former spouse as having predeceased — which can create unintended gaps in your estate plan. Other life events that should prompt a will review include the birth of a child or grandchild, purchasing property, receiving an inheritance, or a significant change in your financial circumstances.
Failing to keep your will current can lead to outcomes that are just as problematic as having no will at all — assets going to the wrong people, executors who are no longer appropriate, or guardianship provisions that are out of date.
Steps to Create a Legally Binding Will
To create a legally binding will in England and Wales, you must:
- Be aged 18 or over (with limited exceptions for military personnel)
- Have mental capacity — you must understand the nature of making a will, the extent of your estate, and the claims of those who might expect to benefit
- Put the will in writing
- Sign the will in the presence of two independent witnesses who are both present at the same time — neither witness (nor their spouse or civil partner) can be a beneficiary, or their gift will fail
- Both witnesses must then sign the will in your presence
We strongly recommend using a specialist solicitor or professional will writer to draft your will. While DIY wills are technically legal, they are a leading cause of disputed estates in the UK because they frequently contain ambiguities, errors, or fail to account for important legal issues like the inheritance tax nil rate band (currently £325,000 per person, frozen since 2009 and confirmed frozen until at least April 2031) and the residence nil rate band (£175,000 per person, but only available if you leave your home to direct descendants such as children or grandchildren — not to nephews, nieces, or friends).
Once your will is complete, store it securely — with your solicitor, at a professional will storage facility, or at the Probate Registry — and tell your executors exactly where it is. A will that nobody can find is as useless as no will at all. Plan, don’t panic — and make sure the people you love are properly protected. And if you want to go further than just a will, a lifetime trust ensures that even if the worst happens, your most valuable assets are already safely outside the probate process and protected for your family’s future.