FOR COUPLES

Two lives, one plan.

For married couples and partners. Mirror Wills are the standard — each spouse has a separate will leaving everything to the other, then to shared beneficiaries. Mutual Wills are different and rarer. Most couples want the first. Tell us your situation and we’ll arrange a free consultation with the right provider. Free for you — providers pay us, not you.

Wills Act compliant

Reciprocal beneficiaries

Guardianship for minors

An Otter-ly Simple Way to Plan Your Will

MIRROR WILL

Standard

Separate wills, reciprocal beneficiaries — revocable ²

MUTUAL WILL

Binding

Pact not to revoke after first death — legally complex ²

MARRIAGE EFFECT

Revokes prior

Marriage automatically cancels older wills (Wills Act s.13) ¹

FOR PARENTS

Guardian

Appoint a testamentary guardian for minor children ³

Two terms, two outcomes.

“Mutual will” is colloquially used to describe what most couples actually want — a Mirror Will. The legal distinction matters when one of you wants to change things later.

Mirror Will is what most couples sign. Each spouse signs a separate will. The contents are reciprocal — each leaves everything to the other, and then to the same children or beneficiaries on the death of the second spouse ². Each spouse can update or revoke their own Mirror Will at any time, including after the other dies.

Mutual Will goes further. Two wills are signed with a binding agreement between the spouses not to revoke after the first death. Once one spouse dies, the survivor is contractually bound to the agreed distribution. Mutual Wills are rare in Singapore practice and carry significant legal complications — courts have interpreted them as creating constructive trusts that restrict the survivor’s freedom over assets they later acquire ². Most couples don’t need this — and many couples who think they want it end up wanting a Mirror Will instead, with a trust structure for specific concerns.

Both types must still comply with the Wills Act 1838 — written, signed at the foot, witnessed by two people present together, neither of whom is a beneficiary or spouse of a beneficiary ¹. Each spouse signs their own will separately, with their own witnesses.

One more thing every couple should know. Under section 13 of the Wills Act, marriage automatically revokes any will made before the marriage — unless the will was expressly made “in contemplation of marriage” to a specific person ¹. If you wrote a will before you got married and never updated it, you’re effectively intestate.

IF YOU HAVE MINOR CHILDREN

The guardianship question.

Testamentary guardian — both wills can name the same guardian for children under 21 in the event of simultaneous death

Simultaneous death scenario — if you and your spouse pass away together (e.g. car accident), the guardian clause becomes critical to keep children with someone you choose ³

Trust for inheritance — many couples use a trust to hold children’s inheritance until they reach a chosen age, rather than distributing at 21

Without a guardian — anyone may apply to court to be appointed, including parties you wouldn’t have chosen ³

What to decide together.

Mirror Wills usually mirror each other in content, but the underlying decisions still need to be made. Make these three together, before you sign.

01 / THE SURVIVOR’S FREEDOM

Mirror or Mutual? Choose deliberately.

Mirror Wills allow the surviving spouse to change beneficiaries later (e.g. remarry, change priorities). Mutual Wills lock them in. Most couples want flexibility for the survivor — but if you specifically don’t, Mutual is the structure. Get advice on which fits your concerns ².

02 / WHAT IF YOU GO TOGETHER

The simultaneous death clause.

Both wills should address what happens if both spouses die in the same incident. Without this clause, your estates may flow through one to the other and be taxed or complicated administratively. With it, the assets pass directly to the named ultimate beneficiaries (typically children, or named alternatives) ³.

03 / CPF & HDB SEPARATELY

Some things don't mirror.

CPF nominations are individual — each spouse needs their own, made via CPF Board ⁴ ⁵. HDB flats held in joint tenancy pass automatically to the survivor by right of survivorship and can’t be willed away . Plan these alongside your Mirror Wills as part of a complete picture.

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4 types

Will types covered — Simple, Mirror, Muslim, with LPA

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If a Mirror Will isn't the fit.

Different family situations need different will structures.

For Individuals

Simple Will.

For unmarried adults, single parents, or anyone whose estate is straightforward.

For Muslims

Muslim Will (Wasiat).

Muslims domiciled in Singapore follow AMLA and Faraid. A Wasiat covers up to one-third of the estate to non-Faraid beneficiaries.

Plan Both

Will vs. LPA.

A will takes effect after death. An LPA takes effect if you lose mental capacity while alive. Most complete estate plans need both.

Two lives, one shortlist.

Mirror Wills are best handled together — by the same writer, on the same day, with the same witnesses. Tell us your situation and we’ll arrange for the right will writing provider to reach out for a free consultation. Free for you, always.

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Sources & citations

Every numbered citation on this page links to a primary source. Click through to verify. Last reviewed: 16 May 2026.

1. Wills Act 1838 — formal validity, marriage revocation (s.13), witness rules
Singapore Statutes Online — Wills Act 1838 (primary source)

2. Mirror vs Mutual Wills — distinction, legal implications
28 Falcon Law — Writing an Enforceable Will in Singapore

3. Guardianship, simultaneous death, will components
SingaporeLegalAdvice — Make a Will in Singapore: Formalities Involved

4.CPF nomination process — individual, not shared
CPF Board — Making a CPF Nomination (primary source)

5. Joint tenancy & right of survivorship for SG property
28 Falcon Law — Writing an Enforceable Will in Singapore

This page is general information, not legal advice. For advice specific to your situation, consult a SG-qualified lawyer. Finspire does not provide legal advice.

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