Chris Aiello Law

How to Make a Will in Illinois (and the Mistakes That Void One)

Making a will in Illinois is governed by a short list of strict rules, and the internet gets several of them wrong. A handwritten will is not automatically valid here. Your witnesses can accidentally forfeit their own inheritance. And the will you paid for does not keep your family out of probate court. This guide covers exactly how to make a will in Illinois that holds up, what it honestly costs in DuPage County, and the after death duty almost every family misses. Written by a DuPage County attorney practicing since 1990.

how to make a will in illinois
The short answer: A valid Illinois will requires that you are 18 or older and of sound mind, that the will is in writing, signed by you, and attested by two credible disinterested witnesses, all under 755 ILCS 5/4-3. Holographic wills, handwritten with no witnesses, are invalid in Illinois. Notarization is not required, but a self proving affidavit is worth adding. Honest cost: roughly $0 to $500 DIY, $300 to $1,000 for an attorney drafted simple will in the DuPage area, and $3,000 to $10,000 or more for a full plan with trusts. And no, a will does not avoid probate.

The Requirements of a Valid Illinois Will

Illinois wills live or die by 755 ILCS 5/4-3, a statute almost no article about this topic actually cites. The requirements:

Age and capacity. You must be 18 or older and of sound mind and memory. The bar for capacity is lower than people assume: you need to know what you own, who your natural heirs are, and what the document does.

In writing. Illinois does not recognize oral wills. It recognizes written ones, and since 2021 a narrow electronic option covered below.

Signed. By you, or by someone else at your direction and in your presence, which protects people physically unable to sign.

Attested by two or more credible witnesses. This is where wills actually fail, so it gets its own section.

The Handwritten Will Myth

Roughly half the states accept holographic wills, documents fully handwritten and signed by the testator with no witnesses. Illinois is not one of them. A handwritten will that is properly witnessed by two people is perfectly valid. The same words with no witnesses are just a letter, and the estate passes as if no will existed, through intestacy. If a loved one died leaving an unwitnessed document, read our guide to dying without a will in Illinois, because that is legally what happened.

Witnesses: The Forfeiture Trap

Your two witnesses should be disinterested, meaning they receive nothing under the will. Illinois has an unusually sharp rule here in 755 ILCS 5/4-6: if a beneficiary serves as a required witness, the will remains valid, but that beneficiary forfeits everything above what they would have received with no will at all. The spouse of a beneficiary triggers the same problem. The practical rule costs nothing: use two neighbors, coworkers, or friends who are not in the document, and never anyone who inherits.

The Self Proving Affidavit: Not Required, Always Worth It

Illinois does not require a will to be notarized. But under 755 ILCS 5/6-4 you can attach a self proving affidavit, one notarized page signed at the same sitting, in which the witnesses swear to the execution formalities. Without it, when the will is eventually probated your witnesses may need to be located, years or decades later, to testify. With it, the will proves itself. Every will we draft includes one, and any competent form should too.

The four legal requirements of a valid Illinois will

A Will Does Not Avoid Probate

This is the most common misconception we correct. A will is your instructions for probate, not a way around it. If your estate exceeds the small estate limits or includes real estate, your executor will open a case at the DuPage Judicial Center whether or not a will exists. If avoiding court is the actual goal, that is trust and TODI territory: see our guide to a living trust in Illinois for when each tool earns its cost.

The Job Only a Will Can Do: Guardians for Minor Children

Whatever else your plan includes, the nomination of a guardian for your minor children lives in your will and nowhere else. A trust cannot do it. For parents, this single clause outweighs everything else in the document, and it is the reason a will belongs in every plan even when a trust holds the assets. See our guardianship page for how nominations work when they are actually needed.

What a Will Honestly Costs in DuPage County

OptionTypical costWhat you actually get
DIY form or software$0 to $500The words, none of the counsel. Execution errors, witness mistakes, and generic terms are on you, and they surface only after death, when they cannot be fixed.
Attorney drafted simple willAbout $300 to $1,000A will drafted to your situation, executed correctly with a self proving affidavit, witnesses handled, and guardian nominations done right.
Will plus powers of attorneyModest package pricingThe will plus property and healthcare powers of attorney, the documents that protect you while you are alive.
Full plan with trust$3,000 to $10,000+Trust, pour over will, POAs, deed work and funding. Justified by real estate, tax exposure, or complexity, not by a sales script.

The honest framing: the cheap option's true price is the probate litigation it can cause. We have seen five hundred dollar savings turn into five figure court fights over a missing witness signature.

Electronic Wills Exist in Illinois

Since 2021, the Electronic Wills and Remote Witnesses Act, 755 ILCS 6, permits electronically signed wills with remote witnessing under specific formalities. It is real and occasionally useful, but a paper will executed in person remains the lower risk path, and it is what we recommend absent a reason.

After a Death: The 30 Day Duty Nobody Knows

Here is the whitespace no ranking article covers. Under 755 ILCS 5/6-1, whoever holds a deceased person's will must file it with the Circuit Clerk of the county where the person resided immediately after death. In DuPage County that is the Circuit Clerk at the Judicial Center in Wheaton, and willfully concealing a will is a crime. Filing the will is not the same as opening probate; it simply places the document on record. Families routinely miss this step for months.

Get it done right the first time

Flat, honest pricing on wills and complete estate plans from a DuPage County attorney practicing since 1990. One meeting, executed correctly, witnesses and affidavit handled.

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Sources: 755 ILCS 5/4-3, 5/4-6, 5/6-1, 5/6-4 (Illinois Probate Act); 755 ILCS 6 (Electronic Wills and Remote Witnesses Act); Illinois Legal Aid Online; DuPage County Circuit Clerk.

Is a handwritten will valid in Illinois?

Only if it is properly witnessed. A handwritten will signed before two credible disinterested witnesses is valid. A holographic will, handwritten with no witnesses, is invalid in Illinois even though some states accept them, and the estate passes by intestacy.

No. Notarization is not a requirement of a valid Illinois will. But the self proving affidavit attached to the will is notarized, and adding one at signing spares your witnesses from having to testify in court years later.

Two or more credible witnesses who watch you sign or acknowledge the will. They should be disinterested. Under 755 ILCS 5/4-6, a beneficiary who serves as a required witness forfeits any gift beyond their intestate share.

No. A will directs probate; it does not bypass it. Estates over the small estate limits or containing real estate go through probate with or without a will. Avoiding probate is the job of trusts, transfer on death instruments, and beneficiary designations.

Illinois intestacy law decides who inherits, in fixed shares you did not choose, and the court selects the administrator. Our guide to dying without a will in Illinois walks through exactly who gets what.

Under 755 ILCS 5/6-1 the person holding the will must file it with the Circuit Clerk of the county where the decedent lived immediately after the death. In DuPage County that is the Circuit Clerk in Wheaton. Filing the will is separate from opening a probate case.

Chris J. Aiello, P.C. is a DuPage County estate planning and probate law firm in Villa Park, Illinois, practicing since 1990.

Related reading: What Happens If You Die Without a Will in Illinois · Living Trust in Illinois · Will vs. Trust in Illinois