Do i need a will

Do I Need a New Will? Major Life Changes That Mean Your Will Should Be Reviewed in Queensland

Marriage, divorce, children, de facto relationships, asset changes and executor issues can all affect how a Will operates in Queensland. Learn when a Will should be reviewed.


A Will Should Change as Life Changes

Many people assume that once a Will is signed, it can simply be put away and forgotten. In practice, that is rarely the best approach.

In Queensland, some life events can revoke a Will, some can cancel only part of it, and others do not affect validity at all but can leave the Will out of date or difficult to administer. That distinction matters.

A Will does not need to be legally invalid before it becomes risky to rely on. If personal circumstances, family arrangements, or asset holdings have changed, the Will should be reviewed to make sure it still reflects current intentions.

The Key Question: Invalid or Simply Out of Date?

A common misunderstanding is that every major life event makes an existing Will “void”. That is not correct.

Under Queensland law:

  • some events can revoke a Will entirely;
  • some events affect only certain gifts or appointments; and
  • some events leave the Will valid, but no longer effective or appropriate.

That is why reviews are so important. The issue is often not whether the Will still exists, but whether it still works.

  1. Marriage

Marriage is one of the most important events for Will-making.

In Queensland, marriage will generally revoke an earlier Will unless the Will was made in contemplation of that marriage.

This means that if a person marries and does not update their estate planning, an earlier Will may no longer operate as intended. In many cases, a new Will should be prepared promptly after marriage unless the existing document was specifically drafted for that event.

Why review is important after marriage:

  • an earlier Will may be revoked;
  • existing gift provisions may no longer suit the new family structure;
  • executor appointments may need to change; and
  • asset ownership may have changed as part of the relationship.
  1. De Facto Relationships

Starting a de facto relationship does not automatically revoke a Will in Queensland.

That said, it is still a major reason to review a Will. A de facto partner may have rights in relation to an estate, and an older Will may no longer reflect the current relationship or the will-maker’s intentions.

The end of a de facto relationship is also significant. In Queensland, the end of a de facto relationship can affect a former partner’s position under the Will in much the same way as divorce affects a former spouse.

Why review is important when a de facto relationship begins or ends:

  • the Will may not provide appropriately for the current partner;
  • former partners may remain named in outdated provisions;
  • executor appointments may no longer be suitable; and
  • the risk of estate disputes may increase if the Will does not reflect current circumstances.
  1. Divorce

Divorce does not usually revoke the entire Will.

Instead, in Queensland, divorce generally revokes gifts made to a former spouse and revokes appointments of that former spouse as executor, trustee, advisory trustee or guardian, unless the Will shows a contrary intention.

This means that the Will may remain partly effective, but key parts of it may no longer work properly. If the former spouse was the main beneficiary or sole executor, the practical effect can be significant.

It is also important to note that separation alone does not automatically change a Will. A person can be separated for years and still have a Will that benefits the former partner unless it is updated or divorce later changes its operation.

Why review is important after separation or divorce:

  • the Will may still contain outdated gifts;
  • an executor appointment may no longer be appropriate;
  • children from a previous or new relationship may need to be considered; and
  • the document may no longer reflect the intended distribution of the estate.
  1. Children and New Dependants

Having a child, adopting a child, or becoming responsible for a new dependant does not automatically revoke a Will in Queensland.

However, it is often one of the strongest reasons to update estate planning. A Will prepared before children may not deal adequately with the realities of family life.

An older Will may fail to:

  • provide for the new child or dependant;
  • appoint a suitable guardian for minor children;
  • include appropriate trust arrangements for children who are too young to inherit directly; or
  • balance the needs of a blended family.

Where a Will does not properly address new family responsibilities, the estate may be more vulnerable to disputes or claims.

Why review is important after children or dependency changes:

  • guardianship wishes may need to be recorded;
  • minors may require testamentary trust arrangements;
  • distribution percentages may no longer be appropriate; and
  • the overall estate plan may need to reflect a changed family structure.
  1. Financial and Asset Changes

A major change in wealth or assets does not automatically invalidate a Will. However, it can make a Will ineffective in practice.

This often happens where the Will was drafted around a very different asset pool. A gift of a specific property, business interest, shareholding or investment may fail if that asset has been sold, restructured or transferred before death.

Common examples include:

  • buying or selling real estate;
  • receiving a significant inheritance;
  • starting, restructuring or selling a business;
  • changes to loans or liabilities;
  • changes to superannuation or life insurance nominations; and
  • moving from simple assets to more complex ownership structures.

Even where the Will remains formally valid, it may no longer distribute the estate in the intended way.

Why review is important after financial change:

  • specific gifts may no longer exist;
  • residue clauses may produce unintended results;
  • business succession planning may be inconsistent with the Will; and
  • asset protection or tax planning considerations may have changed.
  1. Changes to Executors and Beneficiaries

A Will can also become outdated because of changes involving the people named in it.

If a nominated executor dies, loses capacity, moves overseas, or is no longer suitable, the Will does not automatically become invalid. However, administering the estate may become more complicated.

The same applies where a beneficiary has died, family relationships have changed, or named beneficiaries are no longer the intended recipients.


Issues that commonly arise include:

  • no substitute executor is named;
  • a beneficiary dies before the will-maker;
  • gifts no longer reflect family relationships;
  • children become adults and no longer need the same arrangements; or
  • one beneficiary has already received substantial lifetime assistance and the Will has not been adjusted.

Why review is important when people change:

  • replacement executors can be appointed;
  • substitute beneficiaries can be added;
  • outdated gifts can be removed; and
  • the risk of delay and dispute in estate administration can be reduced.
  1. Does a Small Change Mean a New Will Is Needed?

Often, yes.

While there are limited circumstances in which a codicil may be used, a new Will is frequently the clearer and safer option after a significant life event. A fresh document reduces the risk of confusion and ensures the final Will can be read as one complete set of instructions.

Informal handwritten amendments on an existing Will may not be legally effective unless they meet the required formalities.

For that reason, substantial changes are usually best dealt with by preparing a new Will rather than trying to patch an old one.

When Should a Will Be Reviewed?

A Will should be reviewed whenever there is a major change in:

  • marital or relationship status;
  • children, stepchildren or dependants;
  • financial position or asset ownership;
  • business interests;
  • executor suitability; or
  • intended beneficiaries.

As a practical guide, many people should review their Will:

  • after marriage;
  • after separation or divorce;
  • after starting or ending a de facto relationship;
  • after the birth or adoption of a child;
  • after buying or selling major assets; and
  • whenever the people named in the Will are no longer suitable.

The Queensland Position in Summary

In Queensland:

  • marriage generally revokes an earlier Will unless it was made in contemplation of marriage;
  • starting a de facto relationship does not revoke a Will, but it is still a strong reason to review it;
  • divorce usually affects gifts and appointments for a former spouse rather than cancelling the whole Will;
  • children and new dependants do not invalidate a Will, but they often make it outdated;
  • financial changes do not revoke a Will, but they can make it ineffective; and
  • changes to executors or beneficiaries do not usually affect validity, but they can create practical and legal complications.

Final Takeaway

A Will may remain legally valid while no longer being suitable.

That is the real risk after a major life event. The issue is often not whether a Will exists, but whether it still achieves what it was meant to achieve.

For Queensland families, the safest approach is simple: if life has changed, the Will should be reviewed.

Need to Review a Will After a Major Life Change?
A Will should reflect current relationships, current assets and current intentions. If there has been a change in family circumstances, business interests or estate structure, a review can identify whether the existing Will still works or whether a new Will is the better course.