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Wills & Estates

How do I change the estate trustee named in my will in Ontario?

TSL Written by the Treadstone Law team· Updated June 2026

To change the estate trustee named in your will, you have two options: execute a codicil that specifically revokes the old appointment and names a new one, or make an entirely new will that names the new estate trustee and revokes all prior wills.

A codicil is appropriate when the trustee change is the only or main update you need. The codicil should clearly identify the prior will by date, revoke the previous trustee appointment by name, and confirm who the new estate trustee is. It must be signed in front of two witnesses with the same formalities as the original will.

If other provisions of your will also need updating — or if you are replacing both a primary and alternate trustee — a new will is often cleaner. It avoids the need to track two documents and reduces the chance of ambiguity about who is authorized to act.

Important: also check your power of attorney for property and personal care, as these documents often name the same person as your will. A change in one may warrant a corresponding change in the other.

Verbally telling someone they are no longer your estate trustee, or crossing out their name in the will, is not legally effective. Only a proper codicil or new will achieves the change.

Key takeaways

  • Change the estate trustee with a formal codicil or a new will — not by crossing out names
  • A codicil works for isolated trustee changes; a new will is cleaner for multiple changes
  • Also review and update powers of attorney if the same person was named there
  • Verbal changes or informal edits are not legally effective
This is general information, not legal advice. It doesn’t create a lawyer–client relationship, and the rules can change. For advice on your situation, a Treadstone wills & estates lawyer can help.
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