GUIDE DETAIL

Estate Planning Basics Guide

A foundational guide to wills, powers of attorney, probate exposure, and executor clarity under Canadian estate law.

A clarity-first orientation to estate planning in Canada — including wills, powers of attorney, beneficiary designations, probate considerations, and executor responsibilities.

KEY INSIGHT FROM THIS GUIDE

Estate planning is not about documents. It is about reducing delay, confusion, probate friction, and family conflict under Canadian provincial law. Clear authority today prevents court involvement later.

THIS GUIDE IS FOR YOU IF

  • You do not have a current Will or Powers of Attorney drafted under your province’s law.
  • You want to understand executor duties, probate exposure, and beneficiary coordination in Canada.
  • You want clarity before meeting with an estate lawyer.
  • You have dependents, business interests, or registered accounts requiring coordination.

THIS GUIDE IS NOT FOR YOU IF

  • You are seeking complex estate freeze, trust, or cross-border tax structuring advice.
  • You are already working with an estate lawyer and need case-specific legal advice.
  • You want DIY templates without understanding provincial requirements.

Key Questions

Answers to the questions people actually ask.

Select any question to expand the answer.

What are the three core estate planning documents in Canada?
A Will (distribution and executor), a Power of Attorney for Property (financial decisions if incapacitated), and a Power of Attorney for Personal Care (health decisions). Names vary by province but functions are similar.
What happens if I die without a Will in Canada?
Provincial intestacy rules determine distribution. Courts appoint an administrator. Minor children’s inheritance may be restricted. The outcome may not reflect your intentions.
Does a Will avoid probate in Canada?
Not necessarily. Probate requirements vary by province. Some assets pass outside the Will through beneficiary designations or joint ownership.
What does an executor actually do?
An executor gathers assets, files final tax returns, pays debts, distributes assets, and manages estate administration. It is a legal and fiduciary responsibility.
When should estate documents be reviewed?
Every 3–5 years or after major life events: marriage, divorce, birth of children, business changes, or asset growth.

Your Next Steps

If this guide helped clarify the real decisions, the next step is coordinating those choices with your full planning context so execution stays calm and consistent.

One plan. Total clarity.

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