Welcome to the Newport Will Writing Service.
Our Wills are worded using tried and tested legal precedents are ideal for all circumstances including if you are Single, Widowed, Divorced, Married, Separated or Cohabiting. All Wills include Revocation, Appointment of Executors, Guardianship if required, Distribution of your Estate, Any Gifts etc. and Funeral Wishes if required and anything else you wish providing it is possible.
However complicated: We will provide you with a fast highly professional straight forward service by Telephone, Home Visit or by e mail, at a fixed fee price and very importantly the pages of your Will are thermally bound together to make it fully legal in a clear fronted protective cover this also presents your Will professionally and protects it for many years until it is needed.
So what are some of the consequences of dying without a Will?
Fact: If you have not made a Will even your life insurance policies may not be paid until probate has been granted unless they are written into trust! (Probate will take many months, sometimes two or three years to be granted!) that could lead to mortgage arrears or even repossession!
Fact: If your Children are orphaned and you have not appointed a guardian in a Will then Social Services or judge can decide who looks after them including allocating them to Foster Parents!
Fact: If you do not make a Will after your spouse or family have had to employ a solicitor to sort out the mess of dying without a Will! They would be lucky to get change out of £5,000 and in all probability the solicitor's bill may make a mess out of £10,000 for the average property owning family.
Excuses: Most people work hard to provide a home for their family so why do those same people put off the task of writing a Will and risk their families security? You pay thousands of pounds every year in mortgage or rent year after year but refuse to pay a few hundred pounds for something that probably only has to be dealt with once or twice in a lifetime for most people! Here are the most common excuses that I regularly listen to!
1. "Writing a Will is tempting fate": One in three adults in Britain have already written a Will - so if writing one has fatal results the population would soon be reduced by 18 million people! In fact, the British annual death rate is surprisingly stable.
2. "I just haven't got round to it": This is normally because the job doesn't rate high enough on a list of priorities. If the roof leaks, no matter how tight your finances, you get it fixed fast!.
3. "My wife / husband / Children will get everything when I die anyway! wont they"? Not necessarily!
By making a Will: you determine precisely who will inherit your property and assets. Equally important, you can determine who your executors will be to administer your estate and who will act as guardian for any minor children you have, if they are left without a surviving parent.
Without a valid Will: you cannot control who will inherit your property after your death and, your property will be distributed according to law which is likely to be inconsistent with your personal wishes.
You can: also use your Will to express your preferences for burial or cremation and for donating organs or your entire body for medical purposes, in addition, making a specialist Will gives you the opportunity of protecting your home against possible future care home costs this is particularly important if you wish to protect your beneficiaries inheritance.
When you die: leaving a valid Will that appoints executors who are still living at the time of your death legal ownership of all your property passes automatically to those executors and in order to prove that they have the right to deal with your property and they must apply for a legal document confirming their right to do so from the probate registry this process is called obtaining probate.
However complicated: We will provide you with a fast highly professional straight forward service by Telephone, Home Visit or by e mail, at a fixed fee price and very importantly the pages of your Will are thermally bound together to make it fully legal in a clear fronted protective cover this also presents your Will professionally and protects it for many years until it is needed.
So what are some of the consequences of dying without a Will?
Fact: If you have not made a Will even your life insurance policies may not be paid until probate has been granted unless they are written into trust! (Probate will take many months, sometimes two or three years to be granted!) that could lead to mortgage arrears or even repossession!
Fact: If your Children are orphaned and you have not appointed a guardian in a Will then Social Services or judge can decide who looks after them including allocating them to Foster Parents!
Fact: If you do not make a Will after your spouse or family have had to employ a solicitor to sort out the mess of dying without a Will! They would be lucky to get change out of £5,000 and in all probability the solicitor's bill may make a mess out of £10,000 for the average property owning family.
Excuses: Most people work hard to provide a home for their family so why do those same people put off the task of writing a Will and risk their families security? You pay thousands of pounds every year in mortgage or rent year after year but refuse to pay a few hundred pounds for something that probably only has to be dealt with once or twice in a lifetime for most people! Here are the most common excuses that I regularly listen to!
1. "Writing a Will is tempting fate": One in three adults in Britain have already written a Will - so if writing one has fatal results the population would soon be reduced by 18 million people! In fact, the British annual death rate is surprisingly stable.
2. "I just haven't got round to it": This is normally because the job doesn't rate high enough on a list of priorities. If the roof leaks, no matter how tight your finances, you get it fixed fast!.
3. "My wife / husband / Children will get everything when I die anyway! wont they"? Not necessarily!
By making a Will: you determine precisely who will inherit your property and assets. Equally important, you can determine who your executors will be to administer your estate and who will act as guardian for any minor children you have, if they are left without a surviving parent.
Without a valid Will: you cannot control who will inherit your property after your death and, your property will be distributed according to law which is likely to be inconsistent with your personal wishes.
You can: also use your Will to express your preferences for burial or cremation and for donating organs or your entire body for medical purposes, in addition, making a specialist Will gives you the opportunity of protecting your home against possible future care home costs this is particularly important if you wish to protect your beneficiaries inheritance.
When you die: leaving a valid Will that appoints executors who are still living at the time of your death legal ownership of all your property passes automatically to those executors and in order to prove that they have the right to deal with your property and they must apply for a legal document confirming their right to do so from the probate registry this process is called obtaining probate.