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how long do you have to contest a will in south africa

How Long Do You Have to Contest a Will in South Africa (2026): Deadlines, Caveats & Next Steps

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

If you believe a loved one’s will is invalid, the single most important question is how long do you have to contest a will in South Africa before the opportunity disappears. South African law does not impose one blanket statutory deadline that applies to every type of will challenge, but that does not mean time is on your side. Practical cut-offs created by the estate administration process, prescription periods under the Prescription Act 68 of 1969, and the Master of the High Court’s distribution procedures all combine to create urgent, real-world deadlines that shrink with every week of inaction.

This guide, updated for 2026, sets out the critical timelines, explains how to lodge a caveat with the Master’s Office, and provides a step-by-step checklist so you can protect your rights immediately.

How Long Do You Have to Contest a Will in South Africa?, Quick Answer

The short answer contains three layers that every potential challenger must understand before deciding whether, and how quickly, to act:

  • No single statutory cut-off for validity challenges. Neither the Administration of Estates Act 66 of 1965 nor the Wills Act 7 of 1953 prescribes a fixed number of days or months within which you must bring a challenge based on fraud, forgery, lack of testamentary capacity or undue influence. Industry observers expect this position to remain unchanged through 2026, as no amending legislation has been tabled.
  • The practical deadline is distribution. Once the executor’s Final Liquidation and Distribution (L&D) account has been advertised, approved by the Master, and the estate’s assets have been paid out to beneficiaries, recovery becomes extraordinarily difficult and expensive. You must act before assets leave the estate.
  • Certain monetary claims do prescribe. Under the Prescription Act 68 of 1969, a debt, including a maintenance claim against a deceased estate, generally prescribes three years after the date on which the debt became due or the claimant became aware of its existence. Miss that window and the claim may be extinguished entirely.

The practical takeaway: even though the law does not set a universal countdown clock, treating every day as urgent is the only safe approach when you want to contest a will in South Africa.

Critical Timelines and What Triggers the Deadlines

Understanding why there is no single limitation period for a will contest requires looking at the estate administration timeline governed by the Administration of Estates Act. Each milestone the executor passes narrows your window and increases the cost and complexity of any challenge. The table below maps the key events to the action you should take.

Event in the estate process When to act Consequence of delay
Will lodged with the Master / letters of executorship applied for Immediately, lodge a caveat with the Master’s Office within days, ideally within 14 days of becoming aware A caveat alerts the Master and can halt final acceptance of the will and prevent distribution until the dispute is resolved
Letters of executorship issued to the executor Instruct an attorney and consider urgent High Court interdict before assets are dealt with The executor now has legal authority to collect, manage and ultimately distribute estate assets
Final Liquidation & Distribution (L&D) account advertised File a formal objection with the Master during the advertisement period (typically 21 days) and commence or escalate court proceedings If no objection is lodged and the account is approved, distribution follows, remedies become limited to recovery actions against beneficiaries
Executor distributes assets to beneficiaries Seek urgent High Court relief; consider insolvency or tracing remedies Money and property in beneficiaries’ hands are far harder to recover, extra litigation, additional costs, lower probability of full recovery
Prescription of monetary claims (e.g., maintenance) Institute legal proceedings within three years of the debt becoming due or known (Prescription Act 68 of 1969) If the three-year period expires without interruption of prescription, the claim is extinguished by operation of law

When the Master Advertises the L&D Account, What to Watch For

Under the Administration of Estates Act, the executor must lodge a Liquidation and Distribution account with the Master, who then directs that it be advertised in the Government Gazette and a local newspaper. Interested parties, including anyone who wishes to contest the will, typically have 21 days from the date of advertisement to lodge an objection with the Master. This advertisement window is one of the most concrete deadlines in the entire process. If it passes without objection, the Master may approve the account and authorise distribution. Monitoring the Gazette and local press, or instructing a lawyer to do so on your behalf, is essential.

Changes to estate planning rules in South Africa (2026) have reinforced the Master’s reporting obligations, making timely monitoring even more important.

Distribution to Beneficiaries, the Point of No (Easy) Return

Once the executor transfers assets to beneficiaries, the estate itself may effectively cease to exist as a pool from which your claim can be satisfied. You may still bring a legal challenge to the will’s validity, but you would need to pursue individual beneficiaries for the return of assets, a process that involves separate litigation, potential insolvency proceedings and the risk that assets have been spent or dissipated. The limitation period for a will contest therefore has less to do with statute and everything to do with how quickly the executor moves. Early action, particularly lodging a caveat at the Master’s Office, is the single most effective way to buy yourself time.

Grounds to Contest a Will in South Africa

Before committing time and money to a challenge, you need to identify on which legal ground your contest rests. South African courts recognise several bases for setting aside or amending a will, each carrying its own evidentiary burden:

  • Lack of testamentary capacity. The testator must have been of sound mind at the time of executing the will, capable of understanding the nature and effect of the document, the extent of the estate, and the claims of those who might expect to benefit. Evidence typically includes medical records, treating physician statements and testimony from people who interacted with the testator around the date of execution.
  • Undue influence or coercion. Where a beneficiary or third party exerted pressure that overrode the testator’s free will, the court may invalidate the will or the tainted provisions. This is notoriously difficult to prove and often relies on circumstantial evidence, isolation of the testator, sudden changes to an existing will, and the influencing party’s involvement in drafting or witnessing.
  • Fraud or forgery. If the testator’s signature was forged or material misrepresentations induced the testator to sign, the will is voidable. Forensic handwriting and signature examination is the primary evidentiary tool, supplemented by fingerprint or ink-dating analysis where available.
  • Non-compliance with formalities. The Wills Act 7 of 1953 requires that a will be signed by the testator and at least two competent witnesses, all present at the same time. Failure to comply renders the will invalid unless the court exercises its discretion under section 2(3) of the Wills Act to declare the document a valid will despite the defect.
  • Rectification. Where a will does not accurately reflect the testator’s intention due to a drafting error, a court may order rectification under common law, provided there is clear evidence of what the testator actually intended.
  • Revocation. A later will that revokes an earlier one, or physical destruction of the will by the testator with the intention to revoke, may render the contested document invalid.

Identifying the correct ground early determines which documents you need to collect, which experts to instruct and how strong your prospects are, all of which affect cost and timing.

Practical Immediate Steps: What to Do Now

Speed matters more than perfection in the first days after discovering a potentially invalid will. The checklist below is organised by urgency so you can act immediately, even before instructing a lawyer.

First 24–72 Hours

  1. Obtain a copy of the will. Request it from the executor, the deceased’s attorney, or directly from the Master of the High Court’s office in the jurisdiction where the estate is being administered.
  2. Lodge a caveat with the Master’s Office. This is the single most important protective step, see the detailed procedure below.
  3. Secure critical documents. Gather any previous wills, the testator’s medical records (particularly around the date the contested will was signed), bank statements showing unusual transactions, and any correspondence between the testator and potential beneficiaries.
  4. Preserve evidence. Do not delete text messages, emails or WhatsApp conversations with or about the testator. If you have concerns about physical evidence (original documents, medications, diary entries), photograph them and store copies securely.

Days 3–14

  1. Instruct a specialist estate litigation attorney. General practitioners may not have the procedural knowledge to act with the urgency required. Ensure the attorney confirms whether an urgent High Court interdict is necessary to prevent asset dissipation.
  2. Request the letters of executorship requirements from the Master to confirm who has been appointed and on what basis.
  3. Consider interim relief. If assets are at immediate risk, for example, the executor is selling immovable property or withdrawing large sums, your attorney can apply for an urgent interdict in the High Court to freeze the estate pending determination of your challenge.

Weeks 2–12

  1. Identify and interview witnesses. Track down the witnesses who signed the will, carers who attended the testator, and any professionals (doctors, nurses, financial advisors) who interacted with the testator around the execution date.
  2. Instruct forensic experts. If forgery is suspected, commission a handwriting and signature examination. If capacity is at issue, obtain an independent medical opinion based on the available records.
  3. Prepare court papers. Your attorney will draft an initial affidavit or notice of motion. The sooner this is ready, the stronger your position, particularly if distribution is imminent.

Three Months and Beyond

If the matter has not settled, prepare for litigation or mediation. Complex will contests in the High Court can take 12–24 months to reach trial, though early settlement through negotiation or mediation is common. Where a testator held assets across multiple countries, parallel proceedings may be required, adding both time and cost.

Important: if assets have already been distributed before you act, ask your attorney about tracing remedies, unjust enrichment claims and, in extreme cases, insolvency procedures against beneficiaries who received estate property.

How to Lodge a Caveat with the Master, Step by Step

A caveat is a formal written notice filed with the Master of the High Court that alerts the office to a dispute and requests that no further steps in the administration of the estate be taken without first notifying you. The procedure is straightforward:

  1. Prepare a written letter or affidavit addressed to the Master of the High Court in the relevant jurisdiction (Pretoria, Cape Town, Pietermaritzburg, Bloemfontein, Grahamstown or Kimberley).
  2. State your full name, identity number, relationship to the deceased and the estate reference number (if available).
  3. Set out the grounds on which you intend to challenge the will, a brief summary is sufficient at this stage.
  4. Request that the Master take no further steps in the administration of the estate, including issuing letters of executorship or approving the L&D account, without affording you an opportunity to be heard.
  5. Deliver the caveat by hand, registered post or email (where accepted) to the relevant Master’s Office. Retain proof of delivery.

Filing a caveat does not guarantee that administration will be suspended indefinitely, the Master retains discretion, but it creates an official record and significantly increases the likelihood that you will be notified before irrevocable steps are taken.

What the Executor Must Do, Letters of Executorship and Duties

The executor is appointed by the Master and issued letters of executorship, which confer authority to collect assets, pay debts, and distribute the estate according to the will. Under the Administration of Estates Act, the executor is a fiduciary who must act in the interests of all beneficiaries and creditors. If a caveat has been lodged, the executor is generally expected to refrain from making final distributions until the dispute is resolved or the Master directs otherwise. Understanding the letters of executorship requirements helps you assess whether the executor has acted lawfully.

Costs, Funding and Likely Duration of Contesting a Will in South Africa

Cost is one of the most common reasons people hesitate before challenging a will. The following ranges are estimates for 2026 and will vary depending on the complexity of the matter and the seniority of counsel instructed:

Type of contest Estimated cost range (ZAR) Typical duration
Simple challenge (formal defect, clear evidence of forgery) R15 000 – R50 000 3 – 6 months if unopposed
Moderate challenge (capacity, undue influence with expert reports) R50 000 – R150 000 6 – 18 months
Complex High Court trial (multiple parties, extensive evidence) R150 000 – R250 000+ 12 – 24 months or more

Funding options. Some attorneys offer contingency or conditional fee arrangements, particularly where the estate value is substantial. Third-party litigation funders are increasingly active in South Africa and may fund meritorious claims in exchange for a share of the recovery. Legal Aid South Africa may assist in limited circumstances, though resources are constrained and estate disputes are not generally prioritised. Early settlement through negotiation or mediation can reduce costs dramatically, sometimes to a fraction of the estimates above.

What If You Are a Child or Dependent Who Has Been Excluded?

One of the most emotionally fraught situations arises when a child or dependent discovers they have been disinherited. In South Africa, the principle of freedom of testation means a testator generally has the right to leave property to whomever they wish, there is no automatic “forced heirship” as exists in some civil-law jurisdictions.

However, children and dependants are not without options. A dependant who was receiving or entitled to receive maintenance from the deceased may have a claim against the estate under the Maintenance of Surviving Spouses Act 27 of 1990 (for spouses) or under common law and statutory obligations. Such claims are monetary in nature and are therefore subject to the three-year limitation period under the Prescription Act. In addition, if the exclusion resulted from undue influence, lack of capacity or fraud, the child has the same right as any other interested party to challenge the will’s validity, for which, as discussed, there is no fixed statutory time limit but an urgent practical one.

Dependants should lodge a caveat with the Master immediately and seek legal advice on whether their claim is a maintenance claim (subject to prescription) or a validity challenge (subject to practical deadlines).

How the Master of the High Court Handles Will Contests

The Master of the High Court, operating under the Department of Justice and Constitutional Development, plays a central administrative, not adjudicative, role in the estate process. The Master does not decide whether a will is valid or invalid; that power belongs to the High Court. However, the Master’s procedural steps create the framework within which your contest must operate. The comparison table below summarises each step and your options for intervention.

Master’s procedure What it means What to do if you object
Lodgement of will and application for letters of executorship The estate administration process begins; the Master examines the will and may provisionally accept it Request a copy of the will; lodge a caveat immediately to place the Master on notice of the dispute
Advertisement of the Final L&D account Public notice (Government Gazette and local newspaper) of the proposed distribution; interested parties have typically 21 days to object File a written objection with the Master during the advertisement period; apply to the High Court for an interdict if assets are at risk
Issuance of letters of executorship The executor is formally empowered to manage and distribute the estate If the caveat was not lodged before this step, instruct an attorney to seek urgent High Court relief to prevent distribution
Approval of L&D account and distribution The Master authorises the executor to pay beneficiaries, assets leave the estate If distribution has occurred, pursue recovery claims against beneficiaries through the High Court

Recent procedural updates to estate administration in 2026, including tightened electronic reporting requirements and revised conveyancing procedures in South Africa, mean that estates may be wound up more efficiently. The likely practical effect is that the window between lodgement and distribution may be shorter than in previous years, making early action even more critical.

Conclusion: Act Before Distribution, Not After

The question of how long do you have to contest a will in South Africa has no single statutory answer, but the practical answer is emphatic: act now. Every day of delay brings the estate closer to distribution, after which recovery becomes expensive, uncertain and often incomplete. Lodge a caveat with the Master’s Office immediately, secure a copy of the will, preserve your evidence and instruct a specialist estate litigation attorney without delay. If you are a dependent or disinherited child, be aware that maintenance claims carry a three-year prescription period that runs regardless of the estate administration timeline.

The safest course is to treat the first 14 days after discovering the disputed will as your most critical window, and to use that time to lock in the procedural protections that keep your options open.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Kevin Barnard at Kevin Barnard Attorneys, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Department of Justice & Constitutional Development, Master of the High Court / Wills
  2. Administration of Estates Act 66 of 1965, South African Government
  3. Prescription Act 68 of 1969, South African Government
  4. Burger Huyser Attorneys, How Long Do You Have to Contest a Will in South Africa
  5. PM Attorneys, Legal Process for Contesting a Will in South Africa
  6. LegalWills South Africa, Challenge a Will Guide

FAQs

How long do I have to contest a will in South Africa?
There is no single statutory deadline. However, you must act before the estate’s Final Liquidation and Distribution account is approved and assets are distributed. Maintenance and other monetary claims are subject to a three-year prescription period under the Prescription Act 68 of 1969. The safest approach is to lodge a caveat with the Master and instruct a lawyer within days of becoming aware of the issue.
The main grounds recognised by South African courts are: lack of testamentary capacity, undue influence or coercion, fraud or forgery, non-compliance with the formalities required by the Wills Act 7 of 1953, rectification of a drafting error, and revocation by a later will or by the testator’s intentional destruction of the document.
Costs vary widely. A straightforward challenge may cost between R15 000 and R50 000, while complex High Court proceedings can exceed R250 000. Contingency fee arrangements, litigation funding and early settlement through mediation can substantially reduce out-of-pocket expenses.
Yes, but the legal basis depends on the circumstances. A child may challenge the will’s validity on any of the recognised grounds (capacity, undue influence, forgery, etc.). Separately, a child who is a dependant of the deceased may have a maintenance claim against the estate, note that this monetary claim prescribes after three years.
A caveat is a written notice filed with the Master of the High Court requesting that no further steps be taken in the estate administration without notifying you first. You prepare a letter or affidavit setting out your details, your relationship to the deceased and the basis of your intended challenge, then deliver it to the relevant Master’s Office by hand, registered post or email.
Almost certainly. Delay increases the risk that the L&D account will be approved and assets distributed to beneficiaries. Courts may also take delay into account under the equitable doctrine of laches, potentially refusing relief to a challenger who slept on their rights. For maintenance claims, the three-year prescription period runs regardless of estate progress.
The Master’s Office places the caveat on the estate file. The Master retains discretion over how to proceed but will generally require that the dispute be addressed, either through agreement between the parties or by High Court order, before approving the L&D account. You should use the time gained to instruct an attorney, gather evidence and prepare court papers if needed.
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How Long Do You Have to Contest a Will in South Africa (2026): Deadlines, Caveats & Next Steps

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