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how to challenge a will in singapore

How to Challenge a Will in Singapore: Grounds, Evidence and Time Limits

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Understanding how to challenge a will in Singapore is critical for anyone who believes a loved one’s final wishes were not properly recorded, or were the product of coercion, incapacity or procedural error. Singapore law permits interested parties to contest the validity of a will on several distinct grounds, each carrying its own evidentiary burden and procedural pathway. Whether you need to file a caveat before a Grant of Probate is issued or apply to revoke a grant that has already been made, the process is time-sensitive and demands early legal action. This guide sets out the eligibility requirements, recognised legal grounds, step-by-step procedure, evidence checklist and practical time limits that apply when you contest a will in Singapore.

Quick Answer, Can You Contest a Will in Singapore?

Yes. Singapore law recognises three principal routes for challenging a will or a grant of probate:

  • Before the Grant of Probate. File a caveat with the Family Justice Courts to prevent probate from being issued while your objection is investigated.
  • After the Grant of Probate. Apply by originating claim to revoke or set aside the Grant of Probate, seeking a declaration that the will is invalid.
  • Family-provision claim. Even where the will itself is valid, a dependant or spouse may apply to court for reasonable maintenance if the will fails to make adequate provision for them.

The legal framework is primarily governed by the Wills Act (Cap. 352), which prescribes the formalities a valid will must satisfy, and by the Probate and Administration Act, which sets out procedures for grants and their revocation. Proceedings are heard in the Family Justice Courts (for probate matters) or the General Division of the High Court where the case involves complex disputes of fact or law.

Time is the single most important factor. Industry observers note that delays, even of a few weeks, can make evidence harder to obtain and may allow estate assets to be distributed. If you suspect grounds to challenge a will, the recommended first step is to instruct a probate disputes solicitor and, where appropriate, file a caveat immediately.

Who Can Challenge a Will? Eligibility and Standing

Not everyone is entitled to contest a will. To bring a challenge, you must demonstrate a sufficient legal interest, known as standing, in the estate. The categories of persons who most commonly have standing include:

  • Beneficiaries named in a prior will who have been excluded from or disadvantaged by the later will.
  • Beneficiaries under the contested will who believe their entitlement has been diminished through fraud, forgery or undue influence.
  • Persons entitled on intestacy, if the will is declared invalid, the estate would pass under the Intestate Succession Act, benefiting the deceased’s spouse, children and other next-of-kin.
  • Creditors of the estate who have an interest in ensuring the estate is properly administered.
  • Executors or administrators who may need to defend or challenge the validity of a will in their fiduciary capacity.

Family-Provision Applicants, Who Qualifies

A family-provision claim is distinct from a challenge to will validity. Under the Inheritance (Family Provision) Act, a spouse, unmarried daughter, infant son, or child who is, by reason of mental or physical disability, incapable of maintaining themselves may apply for reasonable maintenance out of the estate. The court assesses whether the will (or intestacy distribution) made reasonable provision for that applicant’s maintenance, taking into account the size of the estate, the applicant’s financial needs, and other relevant circumstances. This remedy is available even where the will is otherwise perfectly valid.

When Executors or Administrators Can Be Involved

An executor named in the will has a duty to propound it, that is, to prove its validity in probate proceedings. If the executor has concerns about the will’s validity (for example, if suspicious circumstances surrounding its execution come to light), the executor is entitled, and may be obliged, to bring those concerns before the court rather than simply applying for probate. Conversely, a proposed administrator under an earlier will or under the intestacy rules may challenge the later will in order to establish their own right to administer the estate.

Grounds to Contest a Will in Singapore

The grounds to contest a will fall into five principal categories. In every case, the burden of proof lies on the party challenging the will, assessed on the balance of probabilities. The more serious the allegation, such as fraud or forgery, the more cogent the evidence the court will expect.

Non-Compliance with Wills Act Formalities

Under section 6 of the Wills Act (Cap. 352), a will is only valid if it satisfies prescribed execution formalities. These requirements are strict and cannot be waived by the court:

  • The will must be in writing.
  • It must be signed by the testator, or by some other person in the testator’s presence and by the testator’s direction.
  • The testator’s signature must be made or acknowledged in the presence of two or more witnesses present at the same time.
  • Each witness must attest and sign the will in the presence of the testator (though not necessarily in the presence of each other).

A will that fails any of these requirements is void. Common examples include a will witnessed by only one person, a will where the witnesses were not simultaneously present when the testator signed, or a will signed by the testator after the witnesses had already left the room. Section 6 also provides that no particular form of attestation is required, but the fact of attestation must be demonstrable. Where formality defects are alleged, the original will document, or credible secondary evidence of its contents, becomes essential.

Lack of Testamentary Capacity

A will is invalid if the testator lacked the mental capacity to make it. Singapore courts apply the test established in the landmark English decision of Banks v Goodfellow (1870), which requires the testator to have understood:

  • The nature of making a will and its effects.
  • The extent of the property being disposed of.
  • The claims of persons who might expect to benefit (even if the testator chose to exclude them).
  • That no disorder of the mind poisoned the testator’s affections or perverted their sense of right.

Medical evidence is almost always necessary. Contemporaneous medical records, including GP notes, specialist psychiatric assessments, cognitive test results (such as Mini-Mental State Examination scores) and medication histories, form the core of a capacity challenge. Where the testator had been diagnosed with dementia, Alzheimer’s disease, or another degenerative condition, the timing of the diagnosis relative to the date of the will’s execution is particularly significant. A person with early-stage dementia may still possess testamentary capacity on a given day; the question is always capacity at the moment the will was executed.

Undue Influence and Coercion

A will may be set aside where the testator was subjected to undue influence, meaning coercion that overpowered the testator’s free will and caused them to execute a will that did not reflect their genuine intentions. Unlike some other common-law jurisdictions, Singapore does not recognise a presumption of undue influence in the testamentary context. The challenger must prove, on the balance of probabilities, that influence amounting to coercion was actually exerted.

Evidence of undue influence in a will context often includes patterns of isolation (the testator being kept away from family or independent advisers), financial dependency on the alleged influencer, sudden changes to long-standing testamentary dispositions shortly before death, and control over the testator’s access to legal advice. Witness testimony from caregivers, neighbours, medical professionals and family members can be critical.

Fraud, Forgery and Suspicious Circumstances

Where a will has been procured by fraud, for example, where the testator was deceived about its contents, or where the testator’s signature has been forged, the will is void. Proving fraud or forgery typically requires forensic evidence: handwriting analysis by a qualified document examiner, comparison of signatures against known specimens, and examination of the physical document for irregularities (ink type, paper, insertion of additional pages).

Courts also scrutinise wills executed in suspicious circumstances. If the person who prepared the will or supervised its execution is also a major beneficiary, the court may require that beneficiary to affirmatively prove that the testator knew and approved the will’s contents. This does not create a separate ground of invalidity, but it shifts the practical burden in contentious probate proceedings.

Lack of Knowledge and Approval

Even where the testator had capacity and the will was duly executed, the will, or specific provisions within it, may be challenged on the basis that the testator did not know or approve its contents. This ground typically arises where the will was prepared by a third party and the testator did not read or fully understand it before signing, particularly where the testator was elderly, frail, visually impaired, or not fluent in the language in which the will was drafted. If the court finds that a particular clause was included without the testator’s knowledge, that clause alone may be struck out while the remainder of the will stands.

Before the Grant, Immediate Practical Steps to Challenge a Will in Singapore

If you learn of a death and suspect the will may be invalid, the period before the Grant of Probate is issued is your most important window for action. The following steps should be taken promptly, ideally within the first 30 days.

Step 1: Obtain the Death Certificate and Will Copy

Secure a copy of the death certificate from the Registry of Births and Deaths (Immigration & Checkpoints Authority). If the family holds a copy of the will, request access. The executor named in the will is generally obliged to make the will available to interested parties once probate proceedings commence, but early access allows you to assess your position sooner.

Step 2: Search the SAL Wills Registry

The Singapore Academy of Law (SAL) Wills Registry maintains records of wills that have been deposited with SAL for safekeeping. A search can confirm whether the deceased deposited a will, and, critically, whether there are multiple wills on record. Conducting this search early is essential: if an earlier will exists that benefits you, it may form the basis of your challenge to the later will.

Step 3: File a Caveat with the Family Justice Courts

A caveat is a formal notice lodged with the Family Justice Courts declaring that you have an interest in the estate and objecting to the grant of probate. Once a caveat is filed, the court will not issue a Grant of Probate until the dispute is resolved, withdrawn or otherwise disposed of. This is the single most effective immediate step to protect your position.

Step 4: Preserve Evidence and Put Parties on Notice

Write to all relevant parties, the named executor, the solicitors acting for the estate, and relevant financial institutions, to notify them of your intended challenge and request that estate assets be preserved pending resolution. Simultaneously, take steps to secure evidence: request medical records from the testator’s treating physicians, obtain bank statements showing any unusual transactions before death, and preserve any correspondence (letters, emails, text messages) that may be relevant to capacity, undue influence or the circumstances of the will’s execution.

Action Who to Contact Document / Output Needed
Obtain death certificate ICA (Registry of Births and Deaths) Certified copy of death certificate
Search for deposited wills SAL Wills Registry Search result confirming wills on record
File a caveat Family Justice Courts Filed caveat (retain stamped copy)
Request medical records GP / specialist / hospital Contemporaneous clinical notes and reports
Request financial records Banks and financial institutions Account statements and transaction history
Notify executor / estate solicitors Named executor or instructed law firm Letter on record putting parties on notice

How to Draft and File a Caveat

A caveat filed with the Family Justice Courts should clearly identify the caveator (the person filing), the deceased, the basis of the caveator’s interest in the estate, and the nature of the objection. The caveat is filed together with any required supporting documents. Below is an indicative template, specific wording should be adapted with legal advice:

“I, [Full Name], of [Address], hereby enter a caveat against the grant of probate or letters of administration in the estate of [Deceased’s Full Name], late of [Deceased’s Address], who died on [Date of Death]. My interest in the estate arises as [state relationship or basis of interest, e.g., ‘a beneficiary named in the will of the deceased dated [Earlier Will Date]’ or ‘a child of the deceased entitled on intestacy’]. I object to the grant being issued on the grounds that [briefly state grounds, e.g., ‘the will dated [Date] is invalid by reason of the deceased’s lack of testamentary capacity / non-compliance with execution formalities / undue influence’].”

After Grant, How to Challenge Probate in Singapore, Time Limits and Procedure

If a Grant of Probate has already been issued, you can still challenge the will, but the procedural pathway changes, and urgency increases. Rather than filing a caveat, you must apply to the court to revoke or set aside the grant and to pronounce against the validity of the will.

Applying to Set Aside the Grant vs Challenging Will Validity

These two remedies are related but distinct. An application to revoke the grant asks the court to undo the administrative act of issuing probate, for example, because the grant was obtained by concealing a later will or by misrepresenting the circumstances of the testator’s death. A substantive challenge to will validity goes further: it asks the court to declare the will itself invalid on one or more of the grounds outlined above (lack of capacity, undue influence, formality defects, fraud or lack of knowledge and approval). In practice, the two are often combined in a single set of proceedings.

The challenger initiates proceedings by filing an originating claim in the Family Justice Courts (or the General Division of the High Court for more complex matters). The claim must set out the factual basis for the challenge, the legal grounds relied upon, and the relief sought. Affidavit evidence is filed in support, and the matter proceeds through standard interlocutory steps, discovery, exchange of witness statements, and, where necessary, expert reports, before trial.

Probate Time Limits in Singapore

Singapore does not impose a single statutory deadline for challenging a will after probate has been granted. However, early indications from practitioner experience and case law suggest that courts expect challengers to act promptly. As a general guide, bringing proceedings within six months of the Grant of Probate is considered prudent; many experienced probate practitioners advise that challenges brought more than twelve months after the grant face increasingly difficult questions about delay. The court retains discretion to permit late applications where the challenger can demonstrate good reason for the delay, for example, where evidence of fraud only came to light after the grant was issued, or where the challenger was overseas and unaware of the death.

For family-provision claims, the Inheritance (Family Provision) Act requires applications to be made within six months from the date on which representation in respect of the deceased’s estate is first taken out, unless the court grants leave to apply out of time.

Family-Provision Claims, Timing and Separate Process

A family-provision claim does not challenge the validity of the will. Instead, it asks the court to vary the distribution of the estate to provide reasonable maintenance for an eligible applicant. Because the statutory six-month window runs from the date of the first grant of representation, applicants who are contemplating both a validity challenge and a family-provision claim should file the family-provision application within that period, even if the validity challenge is still being prepared.

Issue Before Grant (Caveat) After Grant (Set-Aside / Challenge Validity) Family-Provision Claim
Primary remedy File caveat to stop probate Originating claim to revoke grant and/or declare will invalid Application for reasonable maintenance from estate
Immediate effect Prevents grant being issued Grant remains effective until set aside by court order Court may order interim preservation of assets
Typical time frame File immediately, within days or weeks of learning of the death No single statutory bar; prompt action recommended (within 6–12 months of grant) Within 6 months of first grant of representation (court may extend)
Evidence focus Preserve documents, secure witness accounts, protect assets Full evidentiary record: medical/forensic reports, affidavits, expert opinions Applicant’s financial needs, estate size, deceased’s obligations

Evidence: Building the Case to Challenge a Will

The strength of any challenge to a will depends on the quality and breadth of the evidence assembled. Below is a practical evidence checklist organised by ground of challenge.

Capacity Evidence

  • Contemporaneous GP notes. Notes recording the testator’s cognitive state around the date the will was executed are among the most persuasive forms of evidence.
  • Specialist psychiatric or geriatric reports. If the testator was under specialist care, request full clinical records including cognitive test scores (e.g., Mini-Mental State Examination, Montreal Cognitive Assessment).
  • Medication history. Certain medications can impair cognition; pharmacy dispensing records may be relevant.
  • Care-home or nursing records. Daily care logs often record observations about the resident’s orientation, mood and behaviour.
  • Retrospective expert opinion. A psychiatrist or geriatrician can review the medical records and provide an expert opinion on the testator’s likely capacity at the relevant date.

Undue Influence and Coercion Evidence

  • Financial records. Bank statements, power-of-attorney documents and records of gifts or transfers made shortly before the will’s execution.
  • Witness statements. Accounts from caregivers, domestic helpers, neighbours, friends and family members describing the testator’s relationship with the alleged influencer.
  • Pattern of testamentary changes. Evidence showing sudden or unexplained departures from prior wills, especially where the new will disproportionately benefits the person who arranged its preparation.
  • Isolation evidence. Records showing the testator was cut off from independent advice or family contact.

Formalities, Fraud and Forgery Evidence

  • The original will document. The physical document itself, or credible evidence explaining its absence, is essential.
  • Attestation evidence. Affidavits from the attesting witnesses (or evidence that they cannot be located or have died).
  • Handwriting and document examination. A qualified forensic document examiner can compare the testator’s signature on the will against known specimens and analyse the document for irregularities.
  • Digital evidence. Emails, text messages or other electronic communications relevant to how the will was prepared and by whom.

Working with Expert Witnesses

Expert witnesses play a central role in contested probate cases. Psychiatrists and geriatricians assess testamentary capacity; forensic document examiners analyse signatures and handwriting; forensic accountants trace financial transactions that may evidence undue influence. When instructing an expert, provide the full set of available records, define the questions to be addressed, and allow adequate time, a thorough retrospective capacity report typically takes four to eight weeks to complete.

Preservation Steps

Evidence can deteriorate or disappear quickly. Send formal preservation letters to banks, medical providers, care homes and solicitors as soon as a challenge is contemplated. A preservation letter should identify the deceased, state the writer’s interest, and request that all relevant records be retained and not destroyed. Where there is a risk that estate assets may be dissipated, consider applying for an injunction to freeze assets pending the outcome of proceedings.

Step-by-Step Practical Checklist for the First 30 Days

The following checklist summarises the critical actions to take within the first 30 days after you become aware of grounds to challenge a will in Singapore:

  1. Instruct a probate disputes solicitor. Obtain legal advice on your standing, the strength of your grounds and the appropriate procedural route.
  2. Obtain the death certificate from ICA.
  3. Search the SAL Wills Registry for any deposited wills.
  4. Secure a copy of the contested will (and any prior wills).
  5. File a caveat with the Family Justice Courts if the Grant of Probate has not yet been issued.
  6. Send preservation letters to banks, medical providers, care homes and the estate’s solicitors.
  7. Request medical records from the testator’s treating physicians.
  8. Gather witness contact details, attesting witnesses, caregivers, family members and anyone with knowledge of the testator’s capacity or the circumstances surrounding the will’s execution.
  9. Instruct expert witnesses (if capacity or forgery is in issue) and provide them with available records.
  10. Assess whether a family-provision claim is also appropriate and, if so, prepare the application within the six-month statutory window.

Remedies, Likely Outcomes and Costs

If the court finds that a will is invalid, it will pronounce against the will and revoke any Grant of Probate issued in reliance on it. The estate then passes either under an earlier valid will or, if no valid will exists, under the Intestate Succession Act. In family-provision claims, the court may order periodic or lump-sum maintenance payments from the estate. Costs in contested probate proceedings vary significantly depending on the complexity of the issues, the volume of evidence, and whether the matter proceeds to trial or settles at mediation. The likely practical effect of early legal advice is to reduce overall costs by focusing the challenge on viable grounds and encouraging early settlement discussions where appropriate.

Industry observers expect straightforward caveat-stage disputes to resolve more quickly and at lower cost than post-grant revocation proceedings that require expert evidence and a full trial.

Conclusion, What to Do Next

Knowing how to challenge a will in Singapore, and acting promptly on that knowledge, can make the difference between preserving your rights and losing them through delay. The essential sequence is: instruct a solicitor, search the Wills Registry, file a caveat (if the grant has not yet been issued), preserve evidence and begin building your case. If the grant has already been made, act within the first six months wherever possible and prepare your originating claim without delay. For family-provision claims, the statutory six-month window is particularly important. To find a Singapore wills and estates lawyer who can advise on your specific circumstances, consult the Global Law Experts directory.

This article provides general information only and does not constitute legal advice. The law and procedures described are subject to change. Readers should consult a qualified solicitor for advice tailored to their specific circumstances.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Mark Cheng at MARK CHENG LAW CORPORATION, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Wills Act (Cap. 352), Singapore Statutes Online
  2. Singapore Academy of Law, Wills Registry
  3. Family Justice Courts (Singapore)
  4. eLitigation, Singapore Courts Judgments
  5. Singapore Legal Advice, How to Contest a Will in Singapore
  6. PKWA Law, Contesting a Will in Singapore
  7. Financial Alliance, 5 Common Grounds for Contesting a Will in Singapore
  8. Global Law Experts, Contest a Will Singapore 2026

FAQs

Can you contest a will in Singapore?
Yes. You can challenge a will on grounds including non-compliance with Wills Act execution formalities, lack of testamentary capacity, undue influence, fraud or forgery, and lack of knowledge and approval. Before the Grant of Probate, file a caveat; after the grant, apply to the court to revoke it.
Instruct a probate disputes solicitor immediately. Assess your legal standing, identify the grounds for challenge, file a caveat with the Family Justice Courts if probate has not yet been granted, secure medical and financial records, and gather witness statements. Early expert evidence on capacity or document authenticity strengthens the case.
Singapore has no single statutory deadline for challenging a will after the Grant of Probate. However, prompt action is strongly recommended, most practitioners advise filing within six to twelve months of the grant. The court may permit late applications where the challenger demonstrates good reason for the delay. Family-provision claims must generally be brought within six months of the first grant of representation.
A will is invalid if it fails to comply with the execution formalities in section 6 of the Wills Act (e.g., not signed by the testator in the presence of two witnesses), if the testator lacked testamentary capacity, if it was procured by undue influence or fraud, or if the testator did not know and approve its contents.
Yes. A caveat is filed with the Family Justice Courts and prevents the court from issuing a Grant of Probate until the caveator’s objection is resolved. It is the most effective immediate step to protect your position before probate is granted.
Under the Inheritance (Family Provision) Act, eligible applicants include the deceased’s spouse, unmarried daughters, infant sons, and children who are incapable of maintaining themselves due to mental or physical disability. The court considers whether the will made reasonable provision for the applicant’s maintenance.
For capacity challenges: contemporaneous medical records, specialist psychiatric or geriatric reports, cognitive test results, medication histories and care-home records. For undue influence: financial records, power-of-attorney documents, witness statements from caregivers and family, and evidence of isolation or sudden changes to testamentary dispositions.
Yes, provided you have standing, for example, as a beneficiary under an earlier will, as a person entitled on intestacy if the will is declared invalid, or as an eligible applicant for a family-provision claim. Creditors of the estate may also have standing in certain circumstances.
The court revokes the Grant of Probate. The estate then passes under the most recent prior valid will. If no valid will exists, the estate is distributed according to the Intestate Succession Act, which prescribes fixed shares for the deceased’s spouse, children and other next-of-kin.
While there is no legal requirement to be represented, contested probate proceedings involve complex rules of evidence, strict procedural requirements and significant costs exposure. Instructing a solicitor experienced in probate disputes is strongly advisable to protect your interests and manage the litigation process effectively.
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How to Challenge a Will in Singapore: Grounds, Evidence and Time Limits

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