Now technology is changing everything. Wills are no longer ink on paper only. We have online wills. We have electronic wills. We even think about digital wills. Laws are shifting. They are trying to catch up.
Let us explore how. And why this matters to you.
Online wills have become common. They are easy to access. They cost less. You answer questions on a platform. The tool generates a document. You print it. You sign it. Witnesses sign too.
All of this follows provincial rules. So yes, online wills are legal in Canada—as long as they follow provincial rules on writing, signing, and witnessing. (Epilogue Wills)
Emergency conditions pushed for changes. The pandemic made remote witnessing more pressing. In Ontario, for a time, wills were allowed to be signed via video conference. This was a temporary change. It helped people make or update wills without being in the same room.
But the rules vary. Some provinces still require wet-ink signatures. Ontario’s Accelerating Access to Justice Act allows virtual witnessing when done properly. Yet the document still needs printing and signing on paper.
In British Columbia, things moved further. Bill 21 (Wills, Estates and Succession Amendment Act) now allows completely digital wills. That means e-signatures, virtual witnessing, and online storage. BC is among the first jurisdictions in Canada to allow this.
So online wills are widespread. But full digital wills are rare–so far, only in BC.
Some provinces allow odd forms of wills. These include holographic wills. They are handwritten, signed, but not witnessed. Quebec, for instance, has civil rules. But in common law provinces like Ontario, holographic wills are valid. In BC, the courts may even accept unusual formats if they reflect intent.
This shows the law can bend. It does so when intent is clear. It does so in emergencies. But it still values traditional formality.
The term “digital will” can also mean a will that deals with digital assets. This includes email, social media, cryptocurrencies, online photos, digital files. These assets are part of modern life. But they are often overlooked in legal documents.
In some provinces, the executor may not have clear authority to touch these digital assets. This stems from service agreements and privacy rules. The solution to this would be to consider attentive planning of the estate, which involves clear directives. Ideally, the access rights given to the executor should be by the will or a power of attorney document.
This includes accounts, passwords, and login specifications. It instructs the executor as to what to keep, dispose of or transfer. (Tierney Stauffer LLP)
Probate continues to matter. A valid will has to be proved. The executor is issued with a certificate by the court. Then the executor may act in law on behalf of the estate. Probate is still resource-intensive. It is paperwork-intensive. It may bring privacy to the open record.
Some of that can be alleviated with digital planning. For example, Ontario has started issuing electronic grants of probate. Some digital assets can be handled more efficiently. But overall, probate remains entrenched. It is still the gateway to estate administration.
These include secure central storage of electronic wills, linking identities to signatures, and protecting originals from tampering. Many jurisdictions are thinking about digital security. If digital wills become widespread, we will need higher standards.
If you plan your estate today, think in layers.
These innovations can become mass ones. But policy and law have to evolve first.
Embrace clarity. Shield your posterity
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Forum Estates is a full-service estate law firm based in Edmonton, providing dependable guidance in wills, probate, estate administration, litigation, and other estate services. We are trusted for our precision, transparency, and commitment to unwavering confidentiality.