A Secondary Will can be a financial planning tool, some homeowners and business owners, mostly in Ontario and British Columbia, use to help reduce the amount of Estate Administration Tax (EAT) that needs to be paid after ones passing to ensure more of their assets end up with their survived family and friends.
Do You Have A Plan in Place in The Event of Your Passing?
It is important to have a plan in place in the event of your death. By not preparing an estate plan, the task of settling your affairs becomes more complicated for surviving family members.
To help, we have put together this handy checklist to ensure you are thinking of the right items in preparation for completing your will.
Will and Marriage
One of the lesser-known legal “rules” that applied to all wills, was that a marriage after the creation of a will invalidated that will, unless a special clause was used “in contemplation” of the nuptials. This rule still applies to anyone who married before January 1st, 2022, and made a will prior to that marriage. Marriages AFTER January 1st, 2022, will no longer invalidate a will made by an individual prior to marriage, as deemed by the amendment to the Succession Law Reform Act.