VA · Will requirements
Virginia will requirements
Witnesses required
2
Standard requirement
Holographic will
Valid
Community property
No
Minimum age
18
E-will
Not established
Traditional execution required
Online notary
Authorized
Since 2012
Minimum Age Requirement
- 18 years old
- Reference: Virginia Code § 64.2-401
Mental Capacity Requirements
- The testator must be of "sound mind"
- Must have testamentary capacity:
- Understanding the nature and extent of their property - Knowing the natural objects of their bounty - Understanding the nature of the testamentary act - Understanding how the will disposes of property
Signature Requirements
- The will must be signed by the testator
- If the testator cannot sign, another person may sign the testator's name at their direction and in their presence
- Reference: Virginia Code § 64.2-403
Witness Requirements
- Two (2) competent witnesses required
- The testator must sign or acknowledge the will in the presence of the witnesses
- Witnesses must sign in the presence of the testator
- Witnesses do NOT need to sign in each other's presence
- Interested witnesses: Do not invalidate the will, but their bequest may be voided unless there are two other disinterested witnesses (§ 64.2-404)
- Reference: Virginia Code § 64.2-403
Notarization Requirements
- Not required for a will to be valid
- Notarization is required for self-proving affidavits
Holographic (Handwritten) Wills
- VALID in Virginia
- Must be entirely in the testator's handwriting
- Must be signed by the testator
- No witnesses required at execution
- At probate, handwriting must be proved by two disinterested witnesses
- Reference: Virginia Code § 64.2-403
Video Wills
- NOT valid as a standalone will
- Video recordings cannot substitute for a written will
Self-Proving Affidavit Requirements
- A will may be made self-proving at execution or later
- Requires an affidavit by the testator and witnesses before a notary public
- A self-proving will may be admitted to probate without witness testimony
- Reference: Virginia Code § 64.2-452, § 64.2-453
Guardian Designation
Naming a Guardian in Your Will
- A will is the primary legal mechanism for designating a guardian for minor children
- The court gives strong weight to your named choice but always applies a "best interests of the child" standard
- Name both a primary guardian and an alternate guardian in case your first choice is unable or unwilling to serve
What Courts Consider
- Your expressed preference (named in will)
- The guardian's relationship with the child
- The guardian's ability to provide care, stability, and continuity
- Geographic proximity and disruption to the child's life
- The child's own preferences (typically considered for children 12+, varies by state)
Limitations
- A guardian named in a will is not automatically appointed — probate court must formally appoint them
- Courts can override your named guardian if circumstances warrant
- A guardian cannot be legally appointed until the court acts — name a standby guardian or make arrangements for immediate temporary care
Best Practices
- Discuss your choice with the person before naming them
- Consider naming successor guardians
- Update your will if your chosen guardian's circumstances change
State-Specific Notes
- Standard approach: will designation is strong evidence of testator's intent; probate court must formally appoint the guardian
Digital Assets
Authorization in Your Will
- RUFADAA adopted: Yes (2017)
- Under RUFADAA, you can authorize your executor to access, manage, distribute, or delete digital assets in your will
- Without explicit authorization, digital service providers may deny access even to executors
What to Include in Your Will
- Online accounts (email, social media, cloud storage)
- Cryptocurrency and digital wallets (include instructions for accessing private keys separately — never in the will itself, which becomes public record)
- Domain names, websites, online businesses
- Digital photos, files stored in cloud services
- Subscription services and stored value accounts
Key Guidance
- Name your digital executor explicitly if possible (can be same as your main executor)
- Store login credentials and recovery keys in a secure password manager or safe deposit box — reference the location in your will without listing the credentials themselves
- Review digital asset provisions with beneficiaries so they know what exists
Electronic Wills (E-Wills)
What is an Electronic Will?
An electronic will (e-will) is a will created, signed, and witnessed entirely in digital form — using electronic signatures and remote online witnessing or notarization. This is distinct from a video will (a video recording), which is not valid anywhere.
Virginia Status
- E-wills: Not established — Virginia has not enacted e-will legislation
- A traditional paper will with physical signatures and in-person witnesses is required
- Electronic signatures on a will are not recognized
> Note: Electronic will laws are evolving rapidly across the US. Several states have enacted legislation since 2017. Verify current Virginia law before assuming e-wills remain unavailable.
Online notarization available in Virginia since 2012
Virginia authorizes Remote Online Notarization (RON) — you can have a commissioned notary witness your signature via live video call, without an in-person appointment. A notarized will includes an optional notary record that speeds up the legal process later for the person handling your estate.
How online notarization works →Official sources
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Make my Virginia will →This information is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Consult a licensed Virginia attorney for specific legal guidance.