It is easy to say 'a Will costs ₹15,000, so writing one is cheap'. It is harder to put a number on what NOT writing one costs your family. This article does exactly that.
If you were to die intestate today — without a Will — exactly how much would your family pay, in legal fees, court fees, lost interest, and missed opportunities, to access and distribute your assets? This question is rarely answered in concrete numbers because the answer varies. But the variance is bounded, and the typical case is more expensive than most people realise. This article walks through realistic numbers for three typical estate sizes.
We will work with three personas:
A 32-year-old software engineer in Bangalore. Wife, no children yet. Parents alive and living in another city.
Total death-benefit estate: ~₹1.27 crore. But the immediate-access estate (excluding the term insurance which has clear nominee process) is around ₹27 lakh.
Under the Hindu Succession Act, 1956, on intestate death, his Class I heirs are: wife, mother. (His father is also Class I.) Each gets an equal share. So the wife gets 1/3, mother gets 1/3, father gets 1/3.
But here is the practical reality:
Total direct monetary cost: ₹2.5–₹4 lakh, plus 9 months of administrative friction, plus permanent family strain.
Will leaves everything to wife. Cost of drafting and registering Will: ₹15,000–₹20,000. Wife is named executor. Nominee on each account matches the Will. Total post-death cost to access: ~₹25,000 in execution fees, transmission paperwork, and basic legal work. Time: 1-2 months. No family disputes because the intent was clear and recorded.
Savings from having a Will: ₹2-₹3.5 lakh, plus 7+ months of family pain.
A 48-year-old marketing director in Mumbai. Wife, two children aged 14 and 11. Mother alive, living with the family. Father deceased.
Class I heirs under Hindu Succession Act: wife, mother, two children. Per-capita distribution means each gets 1/4. The mother — who has not contributed to the estate — gets 25% by operation of law. Practically, most Indian mothers in this situation immediately relinquish their share in favour of the daughter-in-law and grandchildren. But the relinquishment itself is a formal document requiring registration, and any pressure or coercion involved (real or perceived) can be challenged later.
Total direct monetary cost: ₹10-16 lakh, plus 12-18 months of operations, plus the guardianship gap.
Will appoints wife as executor; leaves all assets to her; specifies that if she predeceases, equal shares to children with trustee arrangement until age 25; appoints maternal uncle as testamentary guardian for children if both parents die; makes specific mention of mother as a residuary beneficiary entitled to maintenance from the estate. Will is registered for evidentiary weight. Cost: ₹20,000-₹30,000 in advocate fees plus registration.
Post-death cost: ₹50,000-₹1,50,000 in probate (if required), transmission fees, mutation. Total ₹1-2 lakh. Time: 3-4 months.
Savings from having a Will: ₹8-15 lakh, plus 8-12 months of operational pain, plus guaranteed guardianship for children.
A 58-year-old founder of a manufacturing company. Wife, two adult children (one running the business, one in a separate career). Estate includes 60% shareholding in the company, two flats, jewellery, investments.
The 60% business equity is the lethal asset. On intestate death, the wife and two children each get 1/3 of those shares. The child running the business is now operating with diluted control, possibly contested by the absent sibling. Negotiations between siblings over the business take 12-36 months. The company's growth stalls.
Realistic total direct + opportunity cost for the ₹15 crore estate without a Will: ₹2-4 crore.
A properly drafted Will at this estate level typically uses a combination of (a) specific bequest of business equity to the operationally-active child with a financial offset to the other (e.g., the second flat plus a higher portion of liquid assets), (b) shareholders' agreement updates aligned with the Will, (c) life insurance trust to fund the offset, (d) appointed executors with business experience. Cost of this kind of estate plan: ₹2-5 lakh in legal and advisory fees over the testator's lifetime.
Savings: ₹2-4 crore in business value preservation alone.
| Persona | Estate | Cost WITHOUT Will | Cost WITH Will | Savings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Young Professional | ₹40 lakh | ₹2.5–₹4 lakh | ₹40,000 | ₹2-3.5 lakh |
| Mid-Career Family | ₹2.2 crore | ₹10-16 lakh | ₹1-2 lakh | ₹8-15 lakh |
| Business Owner | ₹15 crore | ₹2-4 crore | ₹3-5 lakh | ₹2-4 crore |
The numbers above don't include:
At a Law Tarazoo flat rate of ₹15,000 for a comprehensive Will:
In every case, the Will is the highest-return financial decision in the entire estate. There is no comparable investment in any other category — not equity, not real estate, not gold — that produces a multiplication of capital this reliably and this consistently.
The arithmetic of estate planning is so one-sided that the only rational explanation for India's low Will-execution rate is psychological, not financial. We resist contemplating our own death — and we pay our families to do it for us, in cash, after we're gone.