Online UAE wills
Make a UAE will online: what you can do online and what the court handles
You can prepare a UAE will document online using a guided self-help workflow. Preparing the document is not the same as registering or notarising it with the relevant court.
The eligibility checker is informational and is not a legal determination.
Can you make a will online in the UAE?
Yes, but the online part is best understood as structured document preparation and route guidance. The official court step remains separate.
What EasyWills helps with
EasyWills is designed for online will document preparation, not court filing or notarisation on your behalf.
EasyWills can help with
- Guided self-help questionnaire
- Preparing an ADGM or ADJD will document based on your selected route and answers
- Arabic translation included
- Court-registration guidance included
- Informational route and eligibility content
You complete directly with the court
- Court registration or notarisation
- Signing or appointment steps required by the court
- Paying court/government fees directly to the court
- Any official acceptance, registry or notarisation process
- Deciding whether to take legal advice
EasyWills does not register, file, notarise, sign or witness your will for you. EasyWills is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice.
Online UAE will process
The safe practical sequence keeps document preparation and the official court step separate.
- 1
Check which route may fit your circumstances. ADGM and ADJD have different rules, fees and processes.
- 2
Prepare your will document online using guided self-help questions.
- 3
Review your information carefully and decide whether you need legal advice.
- 4
Use route-specific court guidance to understand the official next steps.
- 5
Complete registration, notarisation, signing or appointment steps directly with the relevant court.
ADGM, ADJD or DIFC?
ADGM, ADJD and DIFC are separate routes with different rules and processes. EasyWills focuses on guided ADGM and ADJD will document preparation.
ADGM
ADGM’s Wills Office can be relevant for non-Muslim individuals aged 21+ with UAE assets. It has its own court process and fee components.
ADJD
ADJD is a separate Abu Dhabi civil wills route with its own standardised template, process and official fees.
DIFC
DIFC is a separate route with its own Wills Service and fee schedule; EasyWills does not position this page as a DIFC preparation service.
What does an online UAE will cost?
There are two main parts: the EasyWills platform fee for guided document preparation, and separate court/government fees charged by the relevant court.
- EasyWills platform fee
- AED 950–AED 1,500, depending on will type.
- ADJD regular registration
- AED 950, paid directly to the court.
- ADGM route
- AED 950 + USD 155, approximately AED 1,520.
Check which UAE will route may fit
Start with route-fit questions, compare ADGM and ADJD, then join early access from the eligibility flow when prompted. There is no payment today in waitlist mode.
Online will UAE FAQs
Can I make a will online in the UAE?
You can prepare a UAE will document online using a guided self-help workflow. Court registration or notarisation is a separate official step controlled by the relevant court or authority.
Does EasyWills register my will for me?
No. EasyWills helps you prepare an ADGM or ADJD will document based on your selected route and answers, and court-registration guidance is included. You complete the required registration or notarisation step directly with the relevant court.
Is EasyWills a law firm?
No. EasyWills is a self-help document-preparation service. EasyWills is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice.
What does an online UAE will cost?
EasyWills platform fees currently range from AED 950–AED 1,500 depending on will type. Court/government fees are separate and paid directly to the relevant court; ADJD lists AED 950 for regular will registration, while the ADGM route is approximately AED 1,520.
When should I speak to a UAE lawyer?
Speak to a licensed UAE lawyer if you need advice about your circumstances or have complex assets, cross-border issues, business ownership, blended-family or dispute risks, tax questions, or uncertainty about eligibility.