My daughter wants to construct her will and POA, she has been quoted between £1200 by an Edinburgh Solicitor and £19.99 online!! Does anyone have recommendations for a reasonable priced and reputable firm she could use. It is 'Free Wills' month but she is struggling to find someone who will do it.
TIA
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Thread: Wills & POA - Costs etc.
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13-03-2025 01:34 PM #1
Wills & POA - Costs etc.
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13-03-2025 02:50 PM #2This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
I have just re-done my will, and was quoted a higher amount to do that and a POA. I decided, for various reasons, to do just the will for now and leave the POA until later.
I used Gillespie Macandrew, who have been our family solicitors for years, and they charged me £780. Mine was pretty straightforward, but costs will vary depending on the complexity.
Hope that helps :)
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13-03-2025 06:17 PM #3
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Twenty years ago mine cost £150, talk about inflation !
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14-03-2025 11:53 AM #4This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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14-03-2025 12:40 PM #5
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15-03-2025 08:15 AM #6This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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15-03-2025 08:22 PM #8
She's sorted now but it's a reminder if you own a property get a will!! It was a friend of mines wife of 40 years died and as she didn't have a will it cost him £2500 to get everything legally in his name. It's a complete rip off especially as he was struggling with his emotions at the time..
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16-03-2025 05:37 PM #9
I don't this with my parents a few months ago, cost £1300. I'm glad we did though, my mum passed away 4 weeks ago and it would have been so much harder with out POA, my dad doesn't keep well so being able to deal with banks etc without the extra hassle was worth the money we paid out
Last edited by Allant1981; 17-03-2025 at 08:39 PM.
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16-03-2025 08:30 PM #10
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25-03-2025 08:00 AM #11
Had an interesting chat with the solicitor arranging my wife and I’s wills. We have set up living rent wills, which is when one of us passes the survivor retains half of the house and the other half is held in a trust. This means that if the survivor eventually needs to go into care the whole value of the house cannot be considered as an asset of the survivor and be used for care home fees, however the survivor whilst fit and well retains full control and free use of the property.
The interesting part though is in the deeds of the house, if you have lived in the same property for many years, which we have, then your deeds may have been written in an older format and wording to modern deeds. The deeds might state that the property is in you joint names and survivors if one of you passes. If it is worded in this manner it effectively trumps the living rent will and invalidates it, thereby the property would be assessed as an asset in full for the survivor in the event of one of our deaths. To avoid this we have had to signed a declaration that revokes this clause in the deeds so that it protects the property for the survivor and the the living rent will.
I hope I have explained that properly it’s how I have understood it works but please if you are in a similar position get the proper legal advice.
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26-03-2025 09:48 AM #12This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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27-03-2025 08:18 AM #16This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show QuoteThis quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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27-03-2025 10:04 AM #17This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
It's then a case of filling in the registration form and drafting a POA document (and signing)- you'll find plenty of templates or examples online. It costs £96 to register with the OPGS which would be your only other cost.
https://www.publicguardian-scotland....orney-document
Like a lot of things that solicitors do and charge a fortune for it's not that difficult- they just use their own standard template passages and charge you an extra grand for it.
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27-03-2025 10:24 AM #18This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Wasn't charged (though that's 10 years ago, perhaps more common to charge now).
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