Meet Haven — WillRight's professional AI will assistant. Simply chat, and Haven guides you through creating a legally compliant South African will in minutes.
H
Talk to Haven, our AI will assistant — create your will now…
Wills Act 7 of 1953 compliant
Transparent flat fees
POPIA compliant
No hidden percentages
How it works
As simple as a live online conversation. Serious as a legal document.
No appointments. No telephone calls. No legal jargon. No waiting. Just you, our AI, and your completed will — in under 20 minutes.
STEP 01
Chat with AI
Answer simple questions about your family, assets and wishes in plain language.
STEP 02
Review your will
We generate a complete, professionally worded will. You confirm every detail before paying.
STEP 03
Choose your plan
Once-off, annual or lifetime. Pay securely via PayFast. No surprises, no fine print. View pricing →
STEP 04
Download instantly
Instant PDF download with a plain-language signing guide included.
STEP 05
Sign & store
Print, sign in front of two witnesses as required by law. We remind you to update regularly.
Transparent pricing
Honest pricing. Nothing hidden. Ever.
⭐ Most Popular — Annual Plan
Basic Will
R299
Once-off payment
✓Full AI-guided interview
✓Professionally worded will
✓Instant PDF download
✓Signing instruction guide
✓Annual reminder emails
Annual Plan
R599
Per year · renews annually
✓Everything in Basic
✓1 full update per year
✓Secure cloud storage
✓Life-event update reminders
Lifetime
R1,499
Once-off · no renewals ever
✓Everything in Annual
✓Unlimited will updates
✓Priority support
✓Add codicils anytime
✓Free forever
💡
Your will package covers everything above — that's it. WillRight also offers an optional professional estate administration service at a transparent flat fee of R4,999. This fee is only ever payable from your estate at the time it is being administered after your passing — there is nothing to pay now, and it is entirely optional. You can always nominate your own executor at no cost to you. We simply offer this because the industry standard of 3.5% of your estate can cost your loved ones tens of thousands of rands more.
Executor fee comparison — WillRight vs industry standard
Estate Value
Industry 3.5%
WillRight
Your Family Saves
R 500,000
R 17,500
R 4,999
R 12,501
R 1,000,000
R 35,000
R 4,999
R 30,001
R 1,500,000
R 52,500
R 4,999
R 47,501
R 2,500,000
R 87,500
R 4,999
R 82,501
Why WillRight
Built different. For South Africans.
We built WillRight because creating a will should be instant, private, and on your schedule — not dependent on lawyer appointments or unwanted sales calls.
Live AI — on your terms, right now
Chat with our AI instantly, at any hour, from any device. No booking, no waiting room, no phone calls. You get expert guidance the moment you decide you're ready — not when a lawyer has a gap in their diary.
Zero spam. Zero unwanted calls.
We will never call you unsolicited, send you junk mail, or pass your details to third parties. When you're busy, you're busy. WillRight is here when you want it — completely silent when you don't.
Radical transparency
Every rand you'll ever pay — now and later — shown upfront. No fine print. No percentage fees quietly buried in your will without your knowledge.
⚖️
Legally compliant
Drafted to meet the Wills Act 7 of 1953. Every download includes a step-by-step signing guide so your will is properly executed and legally valid.
Private & POPIA compliant
Your personal data is encrypted, never sold, and handled under South Africa's Protection of Personal Information Act. What you share stays between you and WillRight.
Smart reminders when life changes
New baby, new property, marriage, divorce — WillRight nudges you to review your will at the right moments, so it always reflects your current wishes.
Important — signing requirements
Making your will legally valid
WillRight
Will Signing Instruction Guide
1
Print your will
Print all pages on white A4. Number each page. Do not alter or annotate before signing. Use a good quality printer — the document must be clearly legible.
2
Find two witnesses
Must be 14+, mentally competent, not a beneficiary, and not married to a beneficiary. Use disinterested third parties — neighbours or colleagues are ideal.
3
All sign together
All three must be present simultaneously. You sign every page with your full signature (not initials) in black ballpoint ink. Witnesses sign every page alongside you — best practice — or at minimum the last page.
4
Complete the date
Fill in the date and place of signing on the last page. Must be the actual date all three parties were present together.
5
Store the original safely
Only the original wet-ink signed document is valid. Fireproof safe, bank, attorney or executor. Tell your executor and one other trusted person exactly where to find it.
6
Keep a photocopy
For your own reference only — the photocopy has no legal standing. The original is what matters.
⚠ Important: Your will is only legally valid once physically signed by you and two witnesses — all present at the same time and place. An unsigned will has no legal effect under the Wills Act 7 of 1953.
✓ Witnesses ALLOWED
Any disinterested person aged 14 or older
Neighbours, colleagues, or friends with no interest in the estate
Your attorney, accountant, or financial adviser
Adult children — only if they do not inherit under this will
✗ Witnesses NOT ALLOWED
Any person named as a beneficiary in the will
The spouse or partner of any beneficiary
Your own spouse (strongly discouraged — see signing guide PDF)
Any person under 14 years or of unsound mind
✗ Common mistakes that invalidate a will
Not all three parties present at the same time
Using initials instead of full signature
A beneficiary acting as a witness
Using electronic or digital signatures
Missing signature on any page
Storing only a photocopy — original required
Common questions
Everything you need to know
WillRight
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes — provided you follow the included signing instructions. The Wills Act 7 of 1953 requires your will to be signed by you and two competent witnesses, all present at the same time. WillRight generates a fully compliant document — you complete legal execution by signing it correctly. A clear signing guide is included with every download.
No — this is critically important. Electronic signatures are not valid for wills in South Africa. The Electronic Communications and Transactions Act (ECTA) specifically excludes wills from its provisions. Your will must be physically signed in ink by you and two witnesses, all present together.
It's a flat executor administration fee payable from your estate after your passing — not upfront. It is completely optional. You can nominate your own executor at zero charge from WillRight. We offer it because the industry-standard 3.5% can cost your family tens of thousands more.
Your estate is distributed under the Intestate Succession Act — not your wishes. This can cause family conflict, years of delays, and significant avoidable legal costs.
Absolutely. WillRight is fully POPIA compliant. Your data is encrypted, never sold, and used only to generate your will. You can request deletion at any time.
Yes — with Annual or Lifetime plans. Annual includes one full update per year. Lifetime allows unlimited updates forever. We send automatic reminders when life events — new children, marriage, divorce, property — mean your will should be reviewed.
Resources & guides
Will & estate planning made simple
Plain-language guides written for South Africans — everything you need to know about wills, estates, and protecting your family.
Getting Started
What Happens If You Die Without a Will in South Africa?
Without a valid will, the Intestate Succession Act determines who inherits your estate — not you. We explain exactly what this means for your family and why so many South Africans are caught off guard.
How to Make Your Will Legally Valid in South Africa
The Wills Act 7 of 1953 sets out strict requirements for a valid will. Get the signing rules wrong and your will is worthless. This guide walks you through every requirement in plain language.
What Does an Executor Really Charge in South Africa?
The industry standard is 3.5% of your gross estate. On a R2 million estate, that's R70,000. We break down what executor fees cover, what the law says, and how to protect your family from unnecessary charges.
Minor Children and Wills: What Every South African Parent Must Know
Children under 18 cannot legally inherit directly. Without a testamentary trust clause in your will, their inheritance goes to the Guardian's Fund — a government account that's notoriously difficult to access. Here's what to do instead.
In Community of Property vs Out of Community: How Your Marriage Affects Your Will
Your matrimonial property regime determines which assets you can actually leave in your will. Many South Africans don't realise they may only own half — or all — of their estate. This guide explains the three regimes simply.
When Should You Update Your Will? 8 Life Events That Require a Review
Getting married, having a child, buying property, divorcing, starting a business — any of these can make your existing will inadequate or legally problematic. Here are the eight moments that should always trigger a review.
How to Sign Your Will Correctly in South Africa — The Complete Guide
Your will is only as good as its execution. Get the signing wrong — wrong witnesses, wrong order, missing a page — and the entire document can be declared invalid. Here is everything you need to know.
Your will is only as good as its execution. This guide covers every requirement under the Wills Act 7 of 1953.
Creating your will is only half the job. The other half — and arguably the more important half — is making sure it is signed correctly. Under South African law, even a perfectly drafted will becomes worthless if the signing process is flawed. Courts and the Master of the High Court are unforgiving on this point.
The Legal Requirement
Section 2(1) of the Wills Act 7 of 1953 sets out the requirements clearly. A will must be signed by the testator at the end of the document, in the presence of two or more competent witnesses who are present at the same time. Those witnesses must also sign the will in the presence of the testator and of each other.
That last part is critical — all three parties must be physically present simultaneously. There is no workaround, no digital substitute, and no exceptions.
Step-by-Step: How to Sign Your Will
1
Print your will on white A4 paper. Number every page clearly at the bottom. Do not staple the pages before signing — keep them loose. Ensure the print is clear and legible; blurry or faded documents can cause problems with the Master of the High Court.
2
Choose your witnesses carefully. They must be 14 years or older, of sound mind, and — critically — must not be beneficiaries in your will, or married to a beneficiary. Use disinterested third parties: a neighbour, colleague, or friend. Your spouse is strongly discouraged as a witness even if not a beneficiary, because if they appear anywhere in the will — as a secondary heir, executor, or substitute — it can create legal complications under Section 4A of the Wills Act.
3
All three parties must be in the same room. You, Witness 1, and Witness 2 must all be physically present throughout the entire signing process. Signing in different rooms, different locations, or at different times — even minutes apart — renders the will invalid.
4
Sign every page with your full signature. Starting at page 1, sign your full legal signature at the bottom of every single page while both witnesses watch. Use a black ballpoint pen — black ink is the standard preferred by the Master of the High Court for archival scanning. Blue is legally acceptable but can render poorly in high-contrast scans. Do not use initials — only your full signature is valid on every page.
5
Witnesses sign every page alongside you. Although the Wills Act technically only requires witnesses to sign the last page, South African attorneys strongly recommend witnesses sign every page alongside the testator. This is now considered industry best practice and prevents anyone from alleging that intermediate pages were substituted after signing.
6
Complete the witness details on the last page. Each witness should print their full name, South African ID number, cell phone number, and residential address in the spaces provided. The Master of the High Court sometimes needs to contact witnesses years later to verify signatures — having this information readily available is invaluable.
7
Fill in the date and place of signing. Complete the date, town, and province where the signing took place. Use the actual date — do not pre-date or post-date the will. If you need to correct a typed error before signing, that handwritten correction must be initialled in the margin by all three parties at the time of signing.
8
Store the signed original safely. Only the original document with wet ink signatures is valid for probate. A photocopy, scan, or certified copy is generally not accepted by the Master of the High Court without a High Court order. Store your original in a fireproof safe, at your bank's safe custody facility, with your attorney, or with your nominated executor. Tell your executor and at least one other trusted person exactly where it is kept.
Common Mistakes That Invalidate a Will
✗
Sequential signing. Witness A signs, then Witness B signs five minutes later without being present when Witness A signed. This is invalid — all three must be present simultaneously throughout.
✗
Using initials instead of your full signature. Initials on intermediate pages can be grounds for contesting the will.
✗
A beneficiary acting as a witness. Under Section 4A of the Wills Act, a beneficiary who witnesses a will forfeits their inheritance. The will itself may still be valid, but that person loses their bequest.
✗
Electronic or digital signatures. The Electronic Communications and Transactions Act (ECTA) specifically excludes wills from its provisions. No digital signature, WhatsApp confirmation, or electronic process can substitute for a wet ink signature.
✗
Handwritten changes after signing. Any alteration made to the will after it has been signed must itself be signed by the testator and both witnesses — otherwise the change has no effect and may cast doubt on the whole document.
✗
Missing signature on any page. Every page must bear the testator's full signature. A missing page signature can allow allegations that pages were swapped out after signing.
What Happens if Your Will is Invalid?
If your will is found to be invalid — through incorrect signing, incapacity, or any other reason — your estate falls under the Intestate Succession Act 81 of 1987. This means the government determines who inherits based on a fixed formula: surviving spouse and descendants first, then parents, then siblings. Your own wishes become irrelevant. For people with blended families, unmarried partners, or specific wishes about their estate, this can have devastating consequences for the people they leave behind.
Need to Update Your Will?
Never make handwritten changes to a signed will — this can invalidate the entire document. If you need to update your will, return to WillRight using your private access link. Haven will guide you through the changes and generate a new, correctly worded will for you to print and sign fresh with two witnesses. Annual plan holders get one full update per year. Lifetime plan holders have unlimited updates at no extra charge.
WillRight is not a law firm. This article is for informational purposes and does not constitute legal advice.
More guides published regularly. Topics include retirement annuities, business succession, blended families, estate duty, and foreign marriages in South Africa.
Legal reference
Legal glossary & reference appendix
Plain-language explanations of every legal term, act, and role you'll encounter when creating your will and administering an estate in South Africa.
WillRight
Legal Glossary & Reference Appendix
Key Legal Terms Explained
Testator
The person who makes the will. You are the testator. The will sets out your wishes for how your estate should be distributed after your death.
Wills Act 7 of 1953
Last Will and Testament
A legally binding document that records your instructions for the distribution of your estate after your death. Only the most recent valid will applies — all prior wills are revoked.
Wills Act 7 of 1953, s.2
Estate
The total of all your assets (property, money, vehicles, valuables) minus your liabilities (debts, bonds, loans) at the time of your death. This is what gets distributed to your beneficiaries.
Administration of Estates Act 66 of 1965
Beneficiary
A person or organisation named in your will to receive part of your estate. You can name specific items (a car, a house) or a share of the residue. Beneficiaries must survive you by the stipulated survivorship period.
Wills Act 7 of 1953
Residue (Residuary Estate)
Everything left in your estate after all specific bequests have been made and all debts, taxes, and administration costs have been paid. Your will must state who receives the residue — without this clause, it falls under intestate succession.
Wills Act 7 of 1953
Bequest
A specific gift of an asset or sum of money to a named person in your will. For example: "I bequeath my 2019 Toyota Hilux to my son." Bequests are fulfilled before the residue is distributed.
Wills Act 7 of 1953
Codicil
A separate legal document that amends or supplements an existing will without replacing it entirely. Must be signed and witnessed with the same formalities as a will. WillRight's Annual and Lifetime plans allow codicils.
Wills Act 7 of 1953, s.2(1)
Intestate Succession
What happens when someone dies without a valid will. The Intestate Succession Act determines who inherits — typically a spouse, then children, then parents. Your own wishes are irrelevant if you die intestate.
Intestate Succession Act 81 of 1987
Executor
The person or institution appointed in your will (or by the Master of the High Court) to administer your estate. They collect assets, pay debts, pay taxes, and distribute what remains to your beneficiaries.
Administration of Estates Act 66 of 1965, s.13
Letters of Executorship
An official document issued by the Master of the High Court authorising the executor to act. Banks, deeds offices, and other institutions require this before releasing estate assets. Typically takes 4–8 weeks to obtain.
Administration of Estates Act 66 of 1965, s.16
Testamentary Trust
A trust created within your will that only comes into existence on your death. Commonly used to hold assets for minor children until they reach a specified age (e.g. 21 or 25) instead of paying inheritance directly to a child.
Trust Property Control Act 57 of 1988
Guardian's Fund
A government fund administered by the Master of the High Court that holds assets on behalf of minors who have no will provision for a testamentary trust. Notoriously slow and bureaucratic — a testamentary trust in your will is strongly preferable.
Administration of Estates Act 66 of 1965, s.86
Per Stirpes
Latin for "by the roots." A substitution method where if a beneficiary predeceases you, their share passes to their own children (your grandchildren) in equal parts rather than being redistributed among surviving beneficiaries.
Wills Act 7 of 1953
Survivorship Clause
A clause requiring a beneficiary to survive you by a specified period (typically 30 days) to inherit. Without this, if you and a beneficiary die in the same accident, two estates may need to be administered in quick succession — causing delays and extra costs.
Wills Act 7 of 1953
Revocation Clause
A standard clause in every will that cancels all previous wills and codicils. Without this, earlier wills could create confusion or conflict. WillRight automatically includes a full revocation clause in every will generated.
Wills Act 7 of 1953, s.2(1)
Executor's Remuneration
The fee paid to the executor for administering your estate. The statutory maximum is 3.5% of the gross estate value plus VAT. WillRight's optional flat fee of R4,999 is written into your will in place of this tariff, potentially saving your family tens of thousands of rands.
Administration of Estates Act 66 of 1965, s.51
Community of Property
A matrimonial property regime where all assets and debts of both spouses are merged into one joint estate from the date of marriage. Each spouse owns an undivided half share. Your will can only dispose of your half share.
Matrimonial Property Act 88 of 1984
Out of Community of Property
A matrimonial regime (governed by an antenuptial contract) where each spouse retains their own separate estate. With accrual, the growth of each estate is shared on dissolution. Without accrual, estates remain entirely separate. Your will disposes of your entire separate estate.
Matrimonial Property Act 88 of 1984, s.2–6
Estate Duty
A tax levied on the dutiable value of a deceased estate. In South Africa, the first R3.5 million of a deceased estate is exempt. Above that, estate duty is levied at 20% (and 25% above R30 million). Careful estate planning can minimise this liability.
Estate Duty Act 45 of 1955
Antenuptial Contract (ANC)
A contract signed before marriage that determines the matrimonial property regime. Without an ANC, a marriage in South Africa defaults to in community of property. The ANC must be registered at the Deeds Office to be valid.
Matrimonial Property Act 88 of 1984, s.2
Key South African Legislation
Wills Act
Act 7 of 1953
The primary legislation governing the creation, validity, and interpretation of wills in South Africa. Sets out the requirements for a valid will: written document, signed at the end by the testator in the presence of two or more competent witnesses, all present simultaneously. WillRight generates documents compliant with this Act.
Administration of Estates Act
Act 66 of 1965
Governs the reporting, administration, and winding up of deceased estates in South Africa. Establishes the role of the Master of the High Court, prescribes executor duties and remuneration (3.5% statutory tariff), and sets out the process for obtaining Letters of Executorship. All deceased estates with assets exceeding R250,000 must be reported to the Master.
Intestate Succession Act
Act 81 of 1987
Determines how a deceased estate is distributed when there is no valid will (intestate). Establishes a fixed hierarchy of heirs: surviving spouse and descendants first, then parents, then siblings. Does not account for cohabiting partners, stepchildren, or close friends — making a valid will essential for anyone with non-standard family structures.
Matrimonial Property Act
Act 88 of 1984
Governs the property consequences of marriage in South Africa. Establishes the three matrimonial property regimes: in community of property (default), out of community without accrual, and out of community with accrual. Directly affects which assets a testator can dispose of in their will.
Trust Property Control Act
Act 57 of 1988
Regulates the establishment and administration of trusts in South Africa, including testamentary trusts created by a will. Sets out the duties of trustees, reporting obligations to the Master of the High Court, and requirements for trust administration. Relevant for wills that include minor beneficiaries.
Pension Funds Act
Act 24 of 1956
Section 37C of this Act is critically important for will planning: it removes pension fund and provident fund death benefits from the deceased estate entirely. The fund trustees have discretion to distribute these benefits to dependants regardless of what your will says. Retirement annuities (RAs) are similarly excluded from your estate. Name beneficiaries directly with your fund provider.
Estate Duty Act
Act 45 of 1955
Imposes estate duty (a form of inheritance tax) on the dutiable value of a deceased estate. The first R3.5 million is exempt via the basic abatement. Property bequeathed to a surviving spouse qualifies for the spousal abatement and is exempt. Estate duty is 20% on the first R30 million dutiable, and 25% above that.
Children's Act
Act 38 of 2005
Governs the legal guardianship and care of minor children in South Africa. Section 27 is relevant to wills — it sets out who may be appointed as guardian in a will and the court's power to confirm or override such appointments in the best interests of the child. A nominated guardian must be willing and able to act.
Protection of Personal Information Act (POPIA)
Act 4 of 2013
South Africa's primary data protection legislation. Governs how personal information (including the sensitive information collected during will creation) must be collected, stored, processed, and protected. WillRight is fully compliant with POPIA. You have the right to request access to, correction of, or deletion of your personal information at any time.
Electronic Communications and Transactions Act (ECTA)
Act 25 of 2002
While ECTA generally validates electronic signatures and documents in South Africa, Schedule 1 of the Act explicitly excludes wills from its provisions. This means wills cannot be signed electronically — a physical wet ink signature by the testator and two competent witnesses is legally required for a will to be valid.
People & Roles in Estate Administration
Testator / Testatrix
The person who makes the will. "Testator" is the traditional term (historically male); "testatrix" (female). WillRight uses "testator" for all genders. Must be 16 or older and of sound mind when signing.
Executor / Executrix
Appointed in the will or by the Master to administer the estate. Collects and values assets, pays debts and taxes, obtains Letters of Executorship from the Master, and distributes the estate to beneficiaries. Must be a South African citizen or resident, over 18, and not an unrehabilitated insolvent.
Beneficiary
Any person or organisation named to receive assets from your estate. Can be a specific legatee (receives a named item) or a residuary beneficiary (receives a share of what remains). Cannot be a witness to your will.
Witness
A person who attests to the signing of the will. Must be 14 or older, mentally competent, and not a beneficiary or married to a beneficiary. Two witnesses are required. Both must be present when the testator signs, and must sign in each other's presence.
Trustee
The person or institution appointed to manage a testamentary trust on behalf of minor or incapacitated beneficiaries. Owes a fiduciary duty to the trust beneficiaries. Must be registered with the Master of the High Court. Can be the same person as the executor.
Guardian
The adult nominated in your will to assume legal responsibility for your minor children in the event of both parents' deaths. Appointment is subject to confirmation by the relevant court in the best interests of the child. Should be discussed with the nominee before the will is signed.
Master of the High Court
The government official responsible for supervising the administration of deceased estates, trusts, and the Guardian's Fund. Every deceased estate with assets exceeding R250,000 must be reported to the Master within 14 days of death. The Master issues Letters of Executorship and oversees the liquidation and distribution account.
Heir / Legatee
An heir inherits a share of the residuary estate. A legatee receives a specific bequest (a named item or sum of money). A person can be both — receiving a specific item and also a share of what remains.
Liquidator and Distributer
The role of the executor in their capacity to wind up the estate — collecting and liquidating assets, settling debts, and ultimately distributing the net estate to beneficiaries. The executor submits a formal Liquidation and Distribution Account to the Master for approval before distribution.
Step-by-Step: What Happens to Your Estate After Death
1
Death Certificate & Reporting (Within 14 days)
The family obtains a death certificate from the Department of Home Affairs. If the estate exceeds R250,000 in assets, it must be reported to the Master of the High Court within 14 days. The original will, death certificate, and a completed Death Notice form are submitted to the Master.
2
Appointment of Executor (4–8 weeks)
The Master reviews the will and the nominated executor's qualifications. A Letters of Executorship is issued, formally authorising the executor to act on behalf of the estate. Banks and other institutions require this document before releasing assets. For small estates under R250,000, the Master can appoint someone informally.
3
Collection and Valuation of Assets
The executor identifies and collects all assets — immovable property (valued by a registered valuer), bank accounts, investments, vehicles, and personal belongings. The estate is also assessed for liabilities: mortgage bonds, personal loans, credit cards, taxes owed, and administration costs.
4
Liquidation & Distribution Account
The executor prepares a formal L&D Account showing all assets, liabilities, the executor's remuneration, estate duty (if applicable), and the proposed distribution to beneficiaries. This account is submitted to the Master for approval and must lie open for inspection by creditors and beneficiaries for 21 days.
5
Settlement of Debts and Taxes
Before any distribution to beneficiaries, the executor settles all outstanding debts, estate duty, income tax, and administration costs. SARS must confirm that all taxes are settled before the estate can be finalised. If the estate is insolvent, creditors are paid in order of preference and beneficiaries may receive nothing.
6
Transfer of Assets to Beneficiaries
Once the L&D Account is confirmed by the Master, assets are transferred to beneficiaries. Immovable property requires a formal transfer in the Deeds Office. Cash is paid from the estate account. Vehicles are registered in the beneficiary's name. This step can take several additional months depending on asset complexity.
7
Testamentary Trust (if applicable)
If minor children are beneficiaries and a testamentary trust was created in the will, the trustee registers the trust with the Master, receives the minor's inheritance into the trust, and administers it for the benefit of the child until they reach the vesting age specified in the will (e.g. 21 years).
8
Finalisation and Filing
The executor files final confirmation with the Master that the estate has been fully administered. The estate is closed. The entire process typically takes 6–18 months for a straightforward estate. Complex estates (multiple properties, business interests, offshore assets, disputes) can take several years.
WillRight · Haven
Getting started
Your will is ready 🎉
Haven has completed your will. Enter your email — we'll save your will and send you a private link so you can return anytime to update it.
Basic Will
Once-off · no future changes
R299
Annual Plan ⭐
Per year · 1 update included
R599
Lifetime Plan
Once-off · unlimited updates forever
R1,499
Optional executor service: WillRight offers professional estate administration at a flat R4,999 — only payable from your estate after your passing, never upfront. Completely optional — you can use your own executor at no charge.