Canada's top online will platforms are built specifically for provincial law — from Ontario's Certificate of Appointment to Quebec's Civil Code. Here's what you need to know before choosing one.
See Our Top Pick → Compare All ServicesOnly a handful of Canadian platforms are designed specifically for provincial law compliance. We evaluated the leading options on price, provincial coverage, legal quality, and support:
| Service | Price (Single) | Price (Couples) | Quebec Support | Powers of Attorney | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Willful ⭐ Top Pick | CAD $99–$179 | CAD $149–$249 | ✓ (limited) | ✓ | Best overall for most Canadians |
| Epilogue | CAD $139–$219 | CAD $199–$299 | ✓ (limited) | ✓ | More comprehensive document suite |
Willful is Canada's most popular online will platform — built by Canadian lawyers, specifically for Canadian provincial law. Over 100,000 Canadians have used Willful to create a will without setting foot in a lawyer's office.
Epilogue offers a comprehensive estate planning suite that includes your will, Power of Attorney for Property, and Power of Attorney for Personal Care in one package. Slightly pricier than Willful, but offers a more complete document set for those who want everything covered at once.
⚖️ How Canadian Wills Work
Each province has its own wills legislation. Most require: (1) the testator to be 18+ (or married/in military service); (2) written format; (3) signature by the testator; (4) two adult witnesses who are not beneficiaries. Holographic wills (entirely handwritten and signed) are valid in most provinces without witnesses.
⚠️ Quebec is Different: Quebec operates under the Civil Code of Quebec, not a Wills Act. A "notarial will" executed before a notary is the most legally secure form in Quebec and does not require probate. Online-generated wills in Quebec must be treated as "witnessed wills" and will still require a probate-like process. If you're in Quebec, consult a notary.
In Ontario, probate is known as applying for a Certificate of Appointment of Estate Trustee. The provincial government charges Estate Administration Tax (EAT) at 1.5% of the estate's value over $50,000. Unlike some US states, Ontario does not have a simple small estate process for most estates. Assets with named beneficiaries (like RRSPs, TFSAs, and life insurance) bypass probate entirely.
BC's Wills, Estates and Succession Act (WESA) is one of the most modern wills statutes in Canada. It allows courts to validate a will that doesn't strictly meet formal requirements if the court is satisfied it represents the deceased's true intentions. BC also has strong "wills variation" provisions allowing spouses and children to apply to vary a will they feel is inadequate.
Willful is built specifically for Canadian provincial law and trusted by over 100,000 Canadians. Takes about 20 minutes.
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