Clarity for your loved ones, when it matters
Will Planning
A will is the simplest legacy document, but a surprising number of Singaporean families either don't have one, have an outdated one, or have one that contradicts their CPF and insurance nominations. Each of those gaps causes real friction at the worst possible moment.
My role is to make sure your will reflects your actual wishes, fits with your other planning, and is in a form your family can use without months of legal back-and-forth.
What this looks like in practice
Drafting a new will
Working through assets, beneficiaries, executors, and guardianship for minor children, then coordinating drafting with a Singapore-qualified lawyer.
Reviewing an existing will
I'll check your current will against changes in your family or assets (new children, property purchases, business interests, overseas assets).
Lasting Power of Attorney (LPA)
Often paired with a will so that someone you trust can act for you if you lose mental capacity.
Coordinating with CPF nominations
CPF and insurance nominations sit outside your will. I'll make sure all three are pointing in the same direction.
Common questions
Can I just write a will online?
You can, and for very simple estates it may be enough. But most families have at least one wrinkle (overseas assets, a business stake, a dependant who needs more than a lump sum) where a thirty-minute conversation can save your family months of paperwork later.
How often should I update my will?
Whenever your circumstances change meaningfully (marriage, divorce, a new child, a property purchase, a business event), and otherwise every five years as a default check.
Not sure where to start?
The first conversation is a no-cost review of what you already have. I'll tell you honestly whether you need anything else, and what it's worth.