Arrange your Will with a qualified lawyer from your home

Wellers can help you look after your important legal affairs even when a meeting-in-person is not possible. A Wellers Connect Will is:

  • Prepared by a qualified Lawyer and Will writing expert
  • Arranged from your home without the need to visit a Lawyer’s office

We can help you make sure your Will is exactly what you need it to be.

What is Wellers Connect?

The Wellers Connect service enables you to arrange a Will from your home. However, this is NOT an online Will service whereby Will-writing software automatically produces a standard Will and a qualified lawyer never sees it or checks that it fits your needs.

With Wellers Connect you don’t need to come to our offices – we will arrange a remote meeting with a qualified Wellers’ Lawyer so that you can tell us exactly what you need your Will to do for you – all arranged from your own home.

To use Wellers Connect there is a simple five-step process: from sending you a Will Pack, through to the signing and witnessing of your Will documents.

Our qualified professionals cater for all types of Wills from young couples with relatively straightforward but important needs, to complex Wills involving the use of Trusts to protect your assets and look after your loved ones.

What type of Will do you require?

Please see our range of Wills below:


STARTING OUT WILL – An affordable Will for young families to ensure your choice of guardians will be put in place for your children should the worst happen

Protecting your children

Starting Out WillIf you have a young family it is likely that your main concern is the welfare of your children and appointing guardians for them. You may be starting to acquire assets such as property but you have limited capital to protect, so your first thoughts are not focused on Inheritance Tax, but you know you need a Will and you want it written by a professional and at a reasonable cost.

Our Solution

Our Starting Out Will allows young families to have a professionally prepared Will that will ensure that the right protection is in place for your children. As a simple Will, we have been able to reduce the price to make it more affordable at a time when costs are a big concern.

This Will is suitable if all you are looking to do is to leave everything to each other and then to your children and to appoint a guardian. If you are looking to make other gifts, our Family Will is likely to be more appropriate.


LIVING TOGETHER WILL – Avoid double taxation for unmarried couples and potentially save up to £130,000 in Inheritance Tax.

Managing the tax burden for unmarried couples

Living Together WillIf you and your partner are not married or in a civil partnership, and your partner is not included in a Will, they have no automatic right to inherit from your estate. This applies even if you have lived together for a long time or have children together. Your partner will receive nothing unless you include them in
your Will. The options open to them are limited and expensive. They could make a claim against your estate, but the legal costs of such an action could be as high as £100,000 and that is usually payable from your estate if your partner is successful.

If your Will gifts everything to your partner directly, your estate is taxed at 40% above the nil rate band currently £325,000. It is then added to your partner’s estate and taxed again on their death. This can mean that before the value of your assets is passed to your children (for example) after your partner’s death, it has suffered up to 80% tax. This is because partners are treated less favourably than spouses.

Our Solution

We have a solution to this problem that can double the tax relief available to your combined estates with the use of trusts in your Wills, delivering a tax saving of up to £130,000. We call this our Living Together Will.


FAMILY WILL – Ensure your estate goes to the people you care about and identify Inheritance Tax issues you might need to address

Ensuring your partner is financially secure

Family WillYour family is growing up and whilst you need to ensure that they are looked after in terms of welfare and education you now also have property, savings and investments that may bring an Inheritance Tax liability for your estate.
Under the intestacy rules your spouse may not inherit a substantial part of your estate. If you have a spouse or civil partner and children, your spouse or civil partner will inherit all your personal possessions and at least the first £250,000 of your estate, plus half the rest. However it is your children who will be entitled to the other half of the balance which could mean assets may have to be sold and possibly the home to pay your children.

Our Solution

Leave everything to your spouse via your Will either directly with our Family Will or if you need to save Inheritance Tax, via our Capital Protection Will (see below).
This Will is suitable if you have beneficiaries other than your spouse and children who you wish to benefit. As with all our Wills we will review your Inheritance Tax position.


COMPLEX FAMILY WILL – Where more than one marriage is involved this Will can ensure the right family members inherit from your estate

Ensuring the right family members inherit

Complex Family WillWhat do you do if this is your second marriage and you have children from your first marriage? If you do not have a Will, under the intestacy rules your second spouse will inherit your possessions, the first £250,000 of your estate and half the remainder of your estate and your children will receive the balance. Under the intestacy rules, your children from your first marriage are not entitled to inherit from your second spouse. After your death your second spouse is free to make a new Will and leave the assets they inherited from you to whoever they wish.

If your second spouse inherits your assets and then subsequently remarries, the intestacy rules on their subsequent death will leave all or most of their assets to their new spouse and not your children.

Our Solution

By using trusts it is possible to benefit your spouse both as to income and some capital (as needed) whilst ring fencing all or the majority of your capital for your children on your second spouse’s death. We call this our Complex Family Will.


CAPITAL PROTECTION WILL – Use trusts to pay no tax on the first death and substantially reduce tax on the second death

Capital ProtectionEven if you already have a valid Will it may not be effective in reducing your burden of Inheritance Tax. With a typical Will (in which you and your partner leave everything to each other and then to the children), you will pay Inheritance Tax at 40% on your combined estates above £650,000, on the second death. If you do own a home you will pay Inheritance Tax at 40% on everything above £900,000. In the next few years this tax threshold will go up to £1 million. So, if you have an estate of over £1 million you will pay tax at 40% on everything in excess of that.

Our Solution

With the use of trusts, it is possible to pay no tax on the first death and substantially reduce tax on the second death. By careful management of the trusts and their investments and by making timely dispositions to your children directly or placed in trust for the children, it is possible to make adequate provision for the needs of a surviving spouse and to save significant Inheritance Tax. We advise that we are appointed executors of these trusts to ensure that all is done to facilitate these tax savings. We call this our Capital Protection Will.

SAFEGUARDING WILL – Look after the finances and welfare of vulnerable spouses or children when you have gone

Protecting vulnerable loved ones

Safeguarding WillWhat will happen after your death to your vulnerable spouse or child? If they inherit directly are they going to understand their inheritance and how best to use it or will they be likely to squander the money? Remember that their inheritance may mean they will lose their means tested benefits. How can this be prevented?

Our Solution

We offer Safeguarding Wills which put the assets intended for the vulnerable beneficiary on trust and appoint a trusted family member or Wellers as professional trustee (in the absence of a suitable person or to avoid a conflict of interest where another child is competing for an inheritance). If managed correctly, the vulnerable beneficiary can benefit from your money without prejudicing their means tested benefit.

As trustees we take our role very seriously and it is our policy where possible to act in a pseudo-parental role, looking after the financial needs of your family member. This may extend to welfare matters where there is a financial consideration e.g. taking them to the optician to purchase glasses and addressing some other welfare issues. Where the beneficiary lives in the community close to a Wellers office we will regularly visit them at home to ascertain their less obvious needs. If they live further afield we will visit them between one and three times per year as necessary and arrange for local support as required.


BUSINESS PROPERTY RELIEF WILL – If you own a business, you can structure its assets so that it does not become liable to Inheritance Tax on your death

Saving Inheritance Tax on key business assets

Business Property Relief WillIf your trading business’s asset profile is not monitored correctly, you can end up paying 40% tax on its value, on death, instead of 0% Inheritance Tax. If it does qualify for Business Property Relief and you gift it to your spouse, this risks losing the tax relief.

Our Solution

We can perform an audit for you to confirm that your business qualifies for Business Property Relief now, which means you pay 0% Inheritance Tax on the value of your business. If it does not qualify, we can make recommendations to correct this.

Once we have ascertained that your business qualifies, we recommend that we conduct a review with the assistance of your accountants on an annual basis. The rationale for this is that the business must qualify for two consecutive years immediately prior to death.

In conjunction with our Business Will Trusts we can ensure, with the cooperation of the business manager, that it can continue to qualify for the remainder of your spouses’ life and thereafter. We advise that we are made trustees perhaps with your trusted business partner.

HOME PROTECTION WILL – Don’t allow the value of your family home to be lost to pay care fees in later life

Ensuring the family home is not lost to pay care fees

Home Protection WillIf your home is your main asset, you may be concerned about leaving it to a spouse, who could go into expensive care, funded by the value of the home, leaving your children with nothing. Similarly, if you are concerned that your spouse is not financially responsible or may remarry and leave the home to their new spouse at the expense of your children then there is an answer.

Our Solution

Our Home Protection Will puts your share of the home into trust on your death, giving your spouse the right to occupy your half of the family home, whilst ring fencing the capital value of the property for your children. If your spouse subsequently remarries or goes into care, the capital value of the home is protected and your children will inherit it on your spouse’s subsequent death.

It is possible to put all sorts of conditions and additional addendums on the right to occupy and this can be discussed with us, but can include such things as the ability to sell the property and the purchase of a substitute property (again owned by the trust).

You can also give your spouse the right to any rental income generated from the property or interest income from the proceeds of sale, after you have died, still ring fencing the capital for your children.

If you are still not sure what type of Will fits your circumstances best, then you could start by asking yourself the questions below.

If you answer ‘Yes’ to any of these questions, it may be that you will be served best by one of our Specialist Wills. You will be able to talk this through with your solicitor during your appointment.

1.       Do you have a vulnerable relative to provide for? – See our Safeguarding Will
2.       Do you want to protect the value of your home/s from being spent on care fees? – See our Home Protection Will
3.       Are you concerned about paying significant amounts of money to the government in inheritance tax?– See our Capital Protection Will
4.       Do you own a business or have business interests to protect from inheritance tax? – See our Business Property Relief Will
5.       Are you and your partner living together but not married? – See our Living Together Will
6.       Will you need to take multiple marriages into account? – See our Complex Family Will

To get your Will started, send us an enquiry form or simply call 020 8464 4242 and we will arrange an appointment for you to talk to a solicitor by phone or video conferencing to give us your instructions.