Life Interest Trust Will Template (IPDI)

(England & Wales)

Create your life interest trust will with a right of occupation for your spouse or partner, a ring-fenced share of the home for your children, executor and trustee appointments, trustee powers, and final beneficiary provisions.

Professionally drafted — structured following the Wills Act 1837 and the immediate post-death interest (IPDI) rules for England and Wales.

Download a professionally drafted life interest trust will template, also known as an interest in possession trust, an immediate post-death interest (IPDI) will, a right of occupation will, or a property protection trust will. It places your share of the family home into trust on your death, giving your surviving spouse, civil partner, or partner the right to live there for life as life tenant, while ring-fencing the capital for your chosen final beneficiaries (the remaindermen, usually your children) on the second death. Covers executor and trustee appointments, trustee powers including advancing capital and substituting property, the life interest, the gift over to final beneficiaries, survivorship provisions, guardians for minor children, specific gifts, funeral wishes, and witness attestation. It depends on the property being held as tenants in common, so a severance of joint tenancy may be needed first. Structured following the Wills Act 1837 for England and Wales.

One-time payment: £60
✓ Lifetime access • ✓ Lifetime updates • ✓ Fully editable • ✓ Based on UK law • ✓ Instant download
✅ 30-day money-back guarantee*
Build your will first — preview every clause before purchase. Only pay when you're happy.
Interview and editor — both included with your purchase.
📖 Need help?

Choose your method below to get started.

🎯 Two creation methods — same professional document

Whether you prefer step-by-step guidance or a traditional form, both methods produce the identical professionally-formatted life interest trust will. Choose the style that suits you.

Recommended

Smart Interview

One screen at a time — less overwhelming, nothing missed.

Completion Time
~30 min
📋

Classic Editor

Everything on one page — faster if you know what you need.

Completion Time
~20 min

🔒 Your data never leaves your device — saved locally in your browser only

♻️ Unlimited use — update and regenerate your will whenever your circumstances change

💡 A life interest trust only works if your home is held as tenants in common

Get the Life Interest Trust Will + Severance Notice bundle for £65 — this will plus our Notice of Severance of Joint Tenancy, so you can sever a joint tenancy to tenants in common and put the trust in place together. Already own as tenants in common? The will on its own is all you need.

Who Is a Life Interest Trust Will For?

For anyone who wants to provide for a surviving spouse or partner while making sure their share of the home ultimately reaches their own children or chosen beneficiaries.

💍
Second Marriages
Provide for your new spouse • Protect your own children • Avoid sideways disinheritance
👨‍👩‍👧‍👦
Blended Families
Stepchildren provisions • Ring-fenced shares • Fair distribution on second death
👶
Parents Protecting Children
Children's inheritance secured • Capital cannot be redirected • Guardians too
🏠
Cohabiting Partners
Right to remain in the home • Lifetime security • Children still inherit the capital
🏡
Homeowners with Children
Share of home into trust • Life tenancy for the survivor • Tenants in common required
💷
Estate & IHT Planning
IPDI qualifying interest • Spousal exemption first death • Residence nil-rate band available
💚
Protecting a Vulnerable Survivor
Lifetime security • Capital preserved by trustees • Controlled, sensible management
⚖️
Avoiding Sideways Disinheritance
Stops the survivor redirecting capital • Keeps your share for your bloodline • Clear remaindermen

A life interest trust will (an immediate post-death interest, or IPDI) places your share of the family home into trust on your death. Your spouse or partner becomes the life tenant with the right to live there for life, while the capital is ring-fenced for your chosen final beneficiaries — usually your children.▼ Tap below to read more

📋

What Is a Life Interest Trust Will (IPDI)?

A life interest trust will is an ordinary will that creates a trust over a chosen asset — most often your share of the family home — on your death. It is also called an interest in possession trust, a property protection trust, or a right of occupation will. Because the trust starts immediately on death and the survivor has a present right to benefit, it is an immediate post-death interest (IPDI) for tax purposes.

How it is structured:

  • The life tenant — your spouse or partner has the right to live in the property and/or receive income from the trust for the rest of their life.
  • The remaindermen (final beneficiaries) — when the life tenant dies, the capital passes to the people you named, usually your children.
  • The trustees — they hold and manage the trust, with power to advance capital, substitute or downsize the property, and end the trust early where appropriate.

The key feature is control: the survivor is provided for, but cannot redirect your share of the capital away from your chosen beneficiaries.

Our template is based on UK law and structured following the Wills Act 1837 and the IPDI rules under the Inheritance Tax Act 1984.

Without a life interest trust, leaving everything outright to a survivor means they can later change their will, remarry, or spend the capital — and your own children can be unintentionally cut out. This "sideways disinheritance" is a common risk in second marriages and blended families.▼ Tap below to read more

⚠️

Why Use One — and What Happens Without It?

The risks of leaving everything outright:

  • Sideways disinheritance: if you leave your share to your partner absolutely, they can later leave it to anyone — a new spouse, their own children, or someone outside the family — and your children may receive nothing.
  • Remarriage: marriage usually revokes an existing will, so a surviving partner who remarries could die intestate, with the estate passing under intestacy rules rather than to your children.
  • Loss of the capital: the survivor is free to spend or gift the capital during their lifetime, reducing what eventually reaches your beneficiaries.
  • Blended family tension: children from a first relationship and a current partner can have competing interests, leading to disputes.

How a life interest trust helps:

  • Your partner is secure — they keep the right to live in the home for life.
  • Your share of the capital is preserved for your chosen final beneficiaries.
  • The survivor cannot redirect that capital, so your wishes are protected.

This is why life interest trust wills are widely chosen by couples in second marriages, blended families, and anyone who wants to provide for a partner without giving up control of where their own share ultimately goes.

The trust only works if your share of the property can pass under your will. Property held as joint tenants passes automatically to the survivor and bypasses the trust, so it must be held as tenants in common — which often means severing a joint tenancy first.▼ Tap below to read more

🔑

How the Trust Works: Life Tenant, Trustees & Remaindermen

The one essential condition — tenants in common:

A life interest trust can only take effect if your share of the property passes under your will. If you own your home as joint tenants, the whole property passes automatically to the survivor by survivorship and never reaches the trust. The property must be held as tenants in common. If it is currently joint tenants, you sever the joint tenancy first — our Notice of Severance of Joint Tenancy handles this.

What each role does:

  • Life tenant: the right to occupy the property and/or receive trust income for life. They are usually responsible for outgoings such as insurance and repairs.
  • Trustees: typically given power to allow occupation, to sell and substitute or downsize the property if the life tenant moves, to invest, and in some cases to advance capital to the life tenant or bring the trust to an end early.
  • Remaindermen: the final beneficiaries who receive the capital after the life tenant dies, in the shares you set out (with substitution for their own children if one dies before the life tenant).

Our template includes a comprehensive set of trustee powers and a clear gift over to your final beneficiaries, so the trust can be administered sensibly as circumstances change.

For inheritance tax an IPDI usually means no tax on the first death where the life tenant is a spouse or civil partner, with the trust assets forming part of the life tenant's estate on the second death. The residence nil-rate band can still apply, but tax is deferred, not removed.▼ Tap below to read more

💷

Inheritance Tax, the RNRB and Common Mistakes

How inheritance tax generally works with an IPDI:

  • First death: where the life tenant is your spouse or civil partner, the spousal exemption usually means no inheritance tax on the assets passing into the trust.
  • Second death: the trust assets are treated as part of the life tenant's estate and assessed for inheritance tax then — so tax is deferred, not avoided.
  • Residence nil-rate band: because the home ultimately passes to direct descendants, the estate can still qualify for the residence nil-rate band, subject to the £2 million taper threshold.
  • No periodic charges: unlike a discretionary trust, a qualifying IPDI does not attract the ten-year and exit charges that apply to relevant property trusts.

Common mistakes to avoid:

  • Leaving the property as joint tenants — the trust receives nothing.
  • Naming the life tenant or a final beneficiary as a witness — they lose their entitlement under the Wills Act 1837.
  • Treating the trust as a guaranteed way to avoid care fees — deliberate deprivation rules can apply.
  • Forgetting to register the trust with HMRC — a life interest will trust is exempt for the first two years after death, but must be registered on the Trust Registration Service if it continues beyond two years (or sooner if it has a UK tax liability).

Tax figures and thresholds change. Always check the current position on GOV.UK, and consider professional advice for high-value or complex estates.

⚠️ After you download — read this before signing:

First, make sure your home is held as tenants in common — if it is currently joint tenants, sever the joint tenancy so your share can pass into the trust. Sign your will in front of two witnesses who are both present at the same time; witnesses must be 18+, and must not be a beneficiary or the spouse or civil partner of a beneficiary. Your life tenant and final beneficiaries must not act as witnesses. Sign in black ink, keep the pages together with a paper clip rather than staples, and store the original safely where your executors can find it.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is this life interest trust will legally binding?

Yes. When completed and signed correctly, this creates a legally recognised will under England and Wales law, including a life interest trust — an immediate post-death interest, or IPDI.

Our template includes professional legal structure, all required clauses, and proper signing and witness requirements.

Life interest trust wills are widely used across the UK to protect a family home for children while giving a surviving spouse or partner the right to live there for life. High-value or complex estates? Some customers opt for solicitor review before signing.

How much does a solicitor charge for a life interest trust will?

Solicitor fees for a life interest trust will typically range from £500 to £1,500 or more per will, depending on complexity and location — and more again where a pair of wills and a severance of joint tenancy are involved.

Our template is £60 one-time. Many people complete a life interest trust will confidently without additional legal costs.

Consider solicitor review for high-value estates, business assets, or where the £2 million residence nil-rate band taper may apply.

Do I need to sever my joint tenancy first?

Usually, yes. A life interest trust only works if your share of the property can pass under your will. If you own your home as joint tenants, it passes automatically to the survivor and bypasses the trust entirely.

The property must be held as tenants in common. If it is currently joint tenants, you will need to sever the joint tenancy.

Our Notice of Severance of Joint Tenancy handles this step, and the two are available together as a bundle.

What's the difference between a life interest trust will and mirror wills?

Mirror wills usually leave everything to the surviving partner outright, who is then free to change their will and leave the estate to anyone.

A life interest trust will instead ring-fences your share of the home for your chosen final beneficiaries (usually your children), while giving your spouse or partner the right to live there for life. The survivor cannot redirect that capital.

It is often chosen for second marriages, blended families, and to help protect children's inheritance. If you simply want matching wills that leave everything to each other, see our Mirror Wills template.

Does a life interest trust protect the home from care fees?

It can help, but it is not a guaranteed care-fee avoidance scheme and should never be set up purely to avoid care costs.

Because the trust takes effect on death, on the first death your share is ring-fenced for your children rather than passing outright to the survivor, which can reduce the survivor's assessable estate.

However, local authorities apply deliberate deprivation of assets rules, and outcomes depend on individual circumstances. Consider professional advice if care-fee planning is your main concern.

Do I need a solicitor?

Many people complete a life interest trust will without one.

Our template is based on UK law and includes clear guidance for typical estates.

Consider review for complex circumstances, such as high-value estates, business interests, or overseas assets.

What if UK law changes after I purchase?

You receive free lifetime updates — no subscription required, no monthly fees, ever.

We monitor UK law changes and update templates accordingly. When we release an updated version, it appears free in your My Templates page. No extra charges. No recurring fees.

Is this really £60 one-time, or will I be charged monthly?

£60 one-time. That's it. No subscriptions, no recurring fees, no "free trial" traps.

Here's what we don't do: Other sites advertise "free templates" — you spend time filling one in, then they ask for your card for a "free trial" that charges a monthly fee when you forget to cancel. Worse, many are US-based and won't fit UK law. (Read about the scam)

We're different: £60 upfront for the document you actually need. Build it, preview it, pay only when you're happy. Own it forever with free lifetime updates. Based on UK law. No subscription fatigue.

Not sure where to start?

30-Day Money-Back Guarantee

We stand behind every template we sell. If something's technically wrong, we'll make it right.

You're Covered If:

  • File is corrupted or won't open
  • Missing content described on product page
  • Technical errors prevent use as described
  • File format incompatibility that prevents editing

Why you probably won't need this: You can preview the full template with watermark before purchase – so you'll know exactly what you're getting.


Bought the Wrong Template?

Mistakes happen – we get it. Within 30 days, here's how we can help:

Template Swap: We'll cancel your original and issue a different template of equal or lesser value.

Store Credit: Full purchase amount to use on any template. Never expires.

Offered at our discretion for genuine mistakes – we reserve the right to decline repeat or unreasonable requests.


How to Request:

Email [email protected] within 30 days with your order number.

We aim to respond within 2 business days. Approved refunds processed within 5 business days.