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State Law · 8 min read · April 10, 2026

How to Write a Will in Utah (2026 Guide)

This is general legal information for Utah, not legal advice. Will laws change, and specific situations can have exceptions. For any complex case, consult a licensed attorney in Utah.

Why Having a Will Matters

A will is the simplest, clearest way to say what happens to your property, your minor children, and your affairs after you die. Without one, you die "intestate" and Utah’s default inheritance rules (called intestate succession) take over. Those rules are rigid and generic — they do not know your relationships, your intentions, or the people you care about most. They follow a fixed formula.

The cost of skipping a will is not hypothetical. It plays out the same way in Utah as everywhere else: unmarried partners locked out, stepchildren with nothing, pets in shelters, court-appointed administrators, family disputes over items and money, and a probate process that is slower, messier, and more expensive than it needed to be. Whatever you own — even if you think it’s "not much" — someone will have to deal with it after you’re gone. A will decides whether that someone is you or a judge.

A simple Utah will takes about ten minutes to draft using a free tool and costs nothing. You can start drafting yours now. The rest of this guide walks you through what makes a will legally valid in Utah and how to avoid the technical mistakes that most commonly cause wills to be thrown out.

Utah Will Requirements at a Glance

  • Minimum age: 18 years old (Emancipated minors may make a will under the UPC framework)
  • Written form: Must be in writing. Can be typed, printed, or handwritten. Electronic wills are also recognized
  • Witnesses required: 2
  • Notarization: Not required for a standard signed will
  • Self-proving affidavit: Yes — recommended, it speeds up probate later
  • Holographic (handwritten) wills: Yes
  • Electronic wills: Yes

Testamentary Capacity

The testator must be of sound mind: understand the nature and extent of their property, the natural objects of their bounty, and the nature of the testamentary act

Signature Requirements in Utah

You must personally sign the will. Utah does allow proxy signing in specific cases: Another individual may sign in the testator's conscious presence and by the testator's direction

Witness Requirements in Utah

Utah requires 2 witnesses. Generally competent persons. Interested witnesses do not invalidate the will

Presence rules: Each witness must sign within a reasonable time after witnessing either the signing of the will or the testator's acknowledgment of the signature or the will

Interested witnesses: The will is not invalidated by the signature of an interested witness under Utah's UPC framework

The safest approach in every state, including Utah, is to use witnesses who are adults, not beneficiaries under the will, and not the person you’ve named as executor. This avoids any question about whether a witness’s inheritance could be "purged" for being an interested party.

Notarization and Self-Proving Affidavits

Utah does not require a will to be notarized to be valid. A signed and witnessed will is enough. Not required for validity. Required for a self-proving affidavit

Utah does allow a self-proving affidavit, which is a short notarized document attached to the will where you and your witnesses swear under oath that everything was signed properly. It is optional, but it is strongly recommended — a self-proving affidavit means the probate court can admit the will without having to contact your witnesses later. The testator and witnesses must sign an affidavit before a notary public or other officer authorized to administer oaths (Utah Code 75-2-504)

Holographic, Electronic, and Oral Wills in Utah

Holographic (handwritten) wills: Recognized in Utah. Valid whether or not witnessed if the signature and material portions of the document are in the testator's handwriting (Utah Code 75-2-502(2))

Electronic wills: Recognized in Utah under specific conditions. Utah recognizes electronic wills under Utah Code 75-2-1001 et seq. An e-will must be readable as text at signing, can be stored and signed electronically, and requires the same witness requirements as a traditional will

Nuncupative (oral) wills: Not recognized in Utah.

How to Revoke or Update a Utah Will

If you already have a will and want to change it, Utah recognizes these revocation methods: Executing a subsequent will that revokes the previous will expressly or by inconsistency, Performing a revocatory act on the will (burning, tearing, canceling, obliterating, or destroying), Another individual may perform the act in the testator's conscious presence and by the testator's direction, A burning, tearing, or canceling is a revocatory act whether or not it touched any of the words on the will. Utah Code 75-2-507

The cleanest approach is to draft a new will that starts with the sentence "I revoke all previous wills and codicils," then sign it with the proper witnesses. Destroy old copies when you do. Small updates can technically be done by codicil (a formal amendment), but a fresh will is usually easier to read and harder to contest.

Special Provisions in Utah

Utah is a separate property state. Provides an elective share for the surviving spouse under Utah Code 75-2-202 following the UPC augmented estate approach. Utah has adopted electronic will provisions making it one of the more progressive states for digital estate planning

Step-by-Step: Writing a Valid Utah Will

  1. Take inventory. Bank accounts, vehicles, property, valuables, digital assets, pets.
  2. Decide who gets what. Be specific for items that matter (names, addresses, account identifiers). Use a residuary clause ("everything else goes to...") to catch anything you forget.
  3. Name an executor. The person who handles your estate. Pick someone trustworthy, organized, and likely to outlive you. Name a backup too.
  4. Name a guardian for minor children if you have kids under 18. This is the single most important reason for a will if you’re a parent.
  5. Draft the document. Our free drafting tool generates a Utah-specific will in about 10 minutes, with all the correct clauses in the correct order.
  6. Print the will. Don’t rely on a digital copy for signing.
  7. Sign in front of 2 adult witnesses who are not named as beneficiaries. You all need to be in the same room at the same time. You sign first, they sign while watching.
  8. Sign the self-proving affidavit in front of a notary. This is optional but speeds up probate later.
  9. Store it somewhere findable. A fireproof home safe is the standard choice. Tell your executor where it is.
  10. Review every few years and after major life events (marriage, divorce, new child, moving out of Utah, major asset changes).

Common Utah Will Mistakes to Avoid

  • Wrong number of witnesses. Utah requires 2. More is fine; fewer invalidates the will.
  • Using a beneficiary as a witness. Can cause the beneficiary’s share to be "purged" (forfeited).
  • Not signing in the witnesses’ presence. The signing has to happen as a ceremony, with everyone in the same room.
  • Forgetting a residuary clause. Without it, anything you didn’t specifically mention falls into intestate succession.
  • Storing the will where nobody can find it. An unfindable will is the same as no will.
  • Not updating after major life events. An ex-spouse named in an old will can still inherit in some situations.

Need to Check Details?

You can also read the full Utah will requirements and the Utah estate planning guide for background on intestate succession, probate, and related topics.

Start Your Utah Will Now

The easiest way to get a valid Utah will done today is our free drafting tool. It walks you through the questions, generates a Utah-specific document with the correct clauses, and gives you signing instructions tailored to Utah’s requirements. No account, no cost, nothing stored on our servers. You’ll have a draft ready in about ten minutes.

Whatever you decide, decide. A simple will is one of the most meaningful things you can leave the people you love — and it’s one of the easiest things to put off until it’s too late.

Start your free will now

Walks you through the questions, generates a state-specific will, and gives you signing instructions. About 10 minutes, no account, no cost.

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