- For decades, Ontario law operated on a simple — and often surprising — principle: getting married automatically revoked any existing will.
- The Wills, Estates and Succession Statute Law Amendment Act, 2021 came into force on January 1, 2022, and it fundamentally altered the old rule.
- The rules around divorce are different, and they remain in force under current Ontario law.
Getting married or ending a marriage are two of the biggest events in a person's life. They also have real legal consequences for your estate plan — and the rules in Ontario changed significantly on January 1, 2022. Many people are still operating on outdated information.
This article explains the effect of marriage or divorce on a will in Ontario, including the important 2022 legislative change, what happens when couples separate without formally divorcing, and why every major life event should trigger a will review.
The Old Rule: Marriage Automatically Revoked Your Will
For decades, Ontario law operated on a simple — and often surprising — principle: getting married automatically revoked any existing will. The moment you said "I do," your previous will became void. If you died without making a new one, you were treated as dying intestate (without a will), and Ontario's intestacy rules divided your estate — not your own wishes.
There was one exception to this old rule: a will made in contemplation of a specific marriage could survive the wedding. You had to include explicit language in the will stating that it was being made in contemplation of marriage to a named person. This was a specialized drafting technique, not something that applied unless it was deliberately built into the document.
The practical result was that couples who married after already having children from prior relationships — and who had existing wills — often unknowingly stripped those wills of legal effect the day they married.
The 2022 Change: Marriage No Longer Automatically Revokes a Will
This is the change that many Ontarians still haven't heard about.
The Wills, Estates and Succession Statute Law Amendment Act, 2021 came into force on January 1, 2022, and it fundamentally altered the old rule. As of that date — and as of writing; verify current law — marriage in Ontario no longer automatically revokes a will.
If you had a valid will before you married and you married on or after January 1, 2022, your will remains in force. Marriage alone does not void it.
This is a significant improvement for estate planning. It removes the trap that used to catch couples who forgot — or simply didn't know — that they needed to update their wills immediately after a wedding. It also removes the need for the "in contemplation of marriage" clause as a workaround, though that concept may still be relevant when interpreting older wills made before the 2022 change.
However — and this is critical — the 2022 change does not mean you should ignore your will after marriage. A will you made before your marriage almost certainly does not reflect your new circumstances. It may not name your spouse as a beneficiary at all. The law no longer revokes it automatically, but your spouse has no guaranteed inheritance rights under a will that predates the marriage unless you deliberately included them.
The practical takeaway from the 2022 change: your old will survives — but it probably does not say what you now intend. Review it.
What About Divorce?
The rules around divorce are different, and they remain in force under current Ontario law.
When a divorce is granted, any gifts in your will to your former spouse — and any appointment of your former spouse as executor or trustee — are automatically revoked by operation of law. The rest of the will continues to apply as if the former spouse had died before you.
This means the estate does not necessarily fall apart. Other beneficiaries you named still inherit their shares. But if your entire estate was left to your spouse, and no alternate beneficiaries were named, the result may closely resemble dying without a will.
Separation Is Not Divorce
This is one of the most important distinctions in Ontario estates law, and it catches people off guard.
Separation alone — no matter how long — does not affect your will. If you and your spouse separate but never formally divorce, and you die with a will that leaves everything to that spouse, they inherit under that will. Ontario law does not automatically disinherit a separated spouse. Only a final divorce judgment triggers the revocation of gifts to a former spouse.
If you are separated and your will still names your estranged spouse as the primary beneficiary, update your will now. Do not wait for the divorce to be finalized.
Common-Law Spouses: A Separate and Serious Problem
Many Ontarians assume that common-law partners have the same rights as married spouses when it comes to inheritance. They do not.
In Ontario, common-law spouses — regardless of how long the relationship has lasted — have no automatic right to inherit from each other under a will or under the intestacy rules. If your common-law partner dies without a will, you receive nothing automatically. You would need to bring a court application to assert a claim against the estate, which is expensive, uncertain, and painful.
If you are in a common-law relationship, a will is not just recommended — it is essential.
Blended Families: Plan With Care
The combination of remarriage, children from prior relationships, and existing wills creates some of the most complex estate planning situations Ontario lawyers see.
Consider a parent who made a will leaving everything to their children. They later remarry. Under the old law, that will was revoked by the marriage. Under the new 2022 rule, it survives — but it still leaves nothing to the new spouse. The new spouse may have legal claims against the estate depending on the circumstances, but the outcome is far less certain than a clearly drafted will that accounts for everyone.
Blended family situations almost always benefit from purpose-built estate planning, including tools like spousal trusts that can provide for a surviving spouse while protecting children's inheritances.
The Rule That Applies Every Time: Review After Every Major Life Event
Regardless of how the law changes, the principle that should guide your estate planning is simple:
- Got married? Review your will.
- Separated? Review your will immediately.
- Divorced? Review your will.
- Had a child? Review your will.
- Started a common-law relationship? Make a will if you don't have one.
- Acquired significant assets? Review your will.
A will is not a "set it and forget it" document. Life changes, and your estate plan should keep pace.
Frequently asked questions
Does my old will still count if I got married after January 1, 2022?
As of writing — verify current law — yes. The 2022 legislative change means that marriage no longer automatically revokes a will in Ontario. Your existing will remains valid. However, it almost certainly does not reflect your new circumstances, so you should review and update it promptly.
My ex and I separated years ago but never divorced. Does my will still leave everything to them?
Very likely, yes. In Ontario, separation alone does not revoke gifts to a spouse in a will. Only a final divorce order triggers that automatic revocation. If your will names your separated spouse as a beneficiary and you have not updated it, they would inherit under it if you were to die before the divorce is finalized.
I'm in a common-law relationship. Does my partner inherit anything automatically if I die?
No. Ontario's intestacy rules and automatic inheritance rights apply to legally married spouses only. Common-law partners have no automatic inheritance rights in Ontario, regardless of the length of the relationship. If you want your partner to inherit from you, you need a will that says so.
What does "dying intestate" mean, and why does it matter?
Dying intestate means dying without a valid will. When that happens, Ontario's legislation sets out a fixed formula for who receives the estate — typically a surviving spouse first, then children. The formula does not account for your actual wishes, your relationships, or your financial circumstances. It can produce outcomes that would have horrified you. A properly drafted will is the only way to ensure your estate goes where you intend.
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