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Wills

Codicil

A short legal document that amends or adds to an existing Will without replacing it entirely.

What it means

A codicil is a supplement to a Will used to make a small change — such as swapping an executor, adjusting a bequest, or adding a beneficiary — without rewriting the whole document. It must be signed and witnessed with the same formalities as a Will, and it is read together with the original. Because codicils can create ambiguity or get separated from the Will, most modern estate planners simply prepare a fresh Will instead.

How it's used

A codicil is most useful for a single, clear change where re-executing the entire Will would be inconvenient. Example: after his named executor moves overseas, Tom signs a codicil appointing his daughter as substitute executor while leaving the rest of his Will unchanged. Like a Will, a codicil can be revoked, and it is automatically affected by revocation of the underlying Will.

This page is general information about Australian estate-planning terms, not legal advice. See our Legal Disclaimer.

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