Wills, Trusts & Estates in Cardiff.
Wills and probate solicitors in Cardiff, helping people across the city plan ahead and deal with a loved one's estate. Fixed-fee wills, openly published probate costs, and clear advice in plain English.
Wills & Probate Solicitors in Cardiff
Whether you’re making a will, planning for the future, or dealing with the estate of someone who has died, our Cardiff team is here to help. We advise people across the city and the surrounding area on wills, probate, lasting powers of attorney, inheritance tax planning and trusts, calmly, and in plain English. Some clients come to us to put their affairs in order; others are coping with a recent loss and aren’t sure where to begin. Either way, we’ll explain things clearly and take on as much or as little as you need. And if age, illness or mobility makes it hard to get to us, we can come to you at home, anywhere in the Cardiff area.
When someone dies, probate is now applied for online through HM Courts & Tribunals Service, with the Cardiff Probate Registry of Wales serving the Welsh districts, and if you’d prefer, you can deal with the process in Welsh. We take that on for you: valuing the estate, handling the inheritance tax and the paperwork, and dealing with the property. Most Cardiff estates include a home, and as a local firm we know the city’s property and the people who value and sell it.
For wills, many of ours are offered on a fixed fee, so you know the cost from the start, and our probate costs are published openly. Where estate planning involves passing on property in Wales, Land Transaction Tax can apply rather than the English stamp duty, and we’ll explain how.
We act for families across Cardiff and the wider South Wales area. For a full explanation of how each part of wills, trusts and estates works, see our wills, trusts and estates page.
Robertsons Solicitors in Cardiff
Find us: 6 Park Place, Cardiff CF10 3RS
Call Cardiff: 029 2023 7777
Tell us your access needs and we’ll do what we can to accommodate you.
Full Cardiff office details & directions →Specialist wills, trusts & estates — whatever stage you're at
Find the area most relevant to your situation below.
Care Home Fees Planning
Lawful planning around the cost of care, including funding options and challenging unfair care fee assessments.
Learn more →Court of Protection & Deputyship
Acting for someone who has lost capacity, when no LPA is in place.
Learn more →Inheritance & Will Disputes
Challenging wills, Inheritance Act claims, and contested estate administration.
Learn more →Inheritance Tax & Estate Planning
Reducing inheritance tax exposure through lifetime gifts, trusts and structured planning.
Learn more →Lasting Powers of Attorney
Health & welfare and financial decision-making powers for if you lose capacity.
Learn more →Probate & Estate Administration
Applying for the Grant of Probate and dealing with the assets of someone who has died.
Learn more →Trusts
Creating and administering trusts for tax, asset protection or generational planning.
Learn more →Wills
Single wills, mirror wills, and tailored wills for blended families and complex estates.
Learn more →Free tools for wills, trusts & estates
Quick, free and private. Get an instant indication, then talk it through with us.
““We've used Robertsons a few times and they've been excellent - very thorough, professional, and always keeping us up to date. We highly recommend their service.””
Sally RichardsHow we work in Cardiff
Losing someone, or planning for a time you won't be here, is hard enough without legal complication. So we keep things calm and human: we explain everything in plain English, we're upfront about the cost, and we deal with the practical side, the registry, the property and the paperwork, so you don't have to.
- A named contact at our Cardiff office, with home visits if you can't easily travel
- Fixed-fee wills, with probate costs published openly
- We deal with the registry, the property and the paperwork for you
- Everything explained in plain English, so there are no surprises
Who would be looking after you?
Some of your wills, trusts & estates specialists, supported by the wider Robertsons team.
Amy Palin
Amy is a Wills, Trusts and Estates solicitor at Robertsons Solicitors and heads the firm's Probate department. She advises on wills, trusts, Lasting Powers of Attorney, estate planning and probate — including international matters — with a clear, compassionate approach that gives clients genuine peace of mind.
View profileAndrew Humphreys
Andrew is a Director and runs the firm's Barry office. With over 30 years' qualified experience, he started out in family and litigation before broadening his practice, and now deals mainly with residential conveyancing and probate, wills and trusts across Barry and the Vale of Glamorgan.
View profileReal stories from real clients
“Professional and always on hand to take your calls. Nothing is too much trouble and keen to get things moving. Would highly recommend.”Hayley Mccarthy
“First class from beginning to end.”Julie Anne Phillips
“Responsive and speedy. Will use again and would recommend.”Andrew
What makes us different?
A Cardiff firm since 1903
Over a century advising families across the city, and still independent today.
You'll know the cost upfront
Fixed fees for most wills, and probate costs published openly, so there are no surprises.
Local knowledge that helps
We know Cardiff, its property and the Welsh probate registry, which keeps your matter moving.
What do clients ask us most often?
This is one of the most commonly asked questions about trusts — and one of the most important to answer honestly. Transferring assets into a trust with the intention of reducing care home fee liability is considered deliberate deprivation of assets by local authorities. If a local authority believes assets were transferred into a trust specifically to avoid care fees, it can treat those assets as still belonging to you for means-testing purposes — as if the trust does not exist. There is no time limit on how far back a local authority can look. Some trusts are legitimately used for other purposes and may have incidental effects on care fee assessments, but any arrangement marketed primarily as a care fee avoidance scheme should be approached with serious caution and independent legal advice sought before proceeding.
Find out about Trusts →Time limits depend on the type of claim. There is no strict limitation period for challenging the validity of a will itself — a probate claim can technically be brought at any time, though delay significantly weakens a case and the court has discretion to refuse late claims. Inheritance Act claims — where you are not disputing the will's validity but arguing it fails to make reasonable provision for you — must be brought within six months of the grant of probate. This is a hard deadline and extensions are rarely granted. Proprietary estoppel claims — where you were promised an inheritance and acted on that promise — are subject to the general limitation periods, but again delay weakens the claim. Taking advice promptly after a death where a dispute is likely is strongly recommended.
Find out about Inheritance & Will Disputes →Registration with the Office of the Public Guardian currently takes up to 20 weeks from the date of application, though timescales vary. The OPG has been working to reduce waiting times, including through a new online registration system. There is a mandatory four-week waiting period built into the process during which objections can be raised. An LPA cannot be used until registration is complete — which means an LPA made in response to an immediate health crisis is unlikely to be ready in time. Making LPAs while in good health, long before they are needed, is the only reliable way to ensure they are available when required.
Find out about Lasting Powers of Attorney →A straightforward probate typically takes six to twelve months from the date of death to final distribution. The main stages — valuing the estate, submitting the inheritance tax account, applying for the grant, collecting assets, paying debts, and distributing to beneficiaries — each take time, and some cannot begin until earlier ones are complete. HMRC currently takes around 20 weeks to process inheritance tax returns before a grant application can proceed. Contested estates, those with complex assets, overseas property, or business interests can take considerably longer — sometimes several years if a dispute reaches court.
Find out about Probate & Estate Administration →We charge a fixed fee for wills, so you know the full cost before we start. We offer fixed fees for both single wills and mirror wills for couples — contact us for current pricing. The cost of making a will is modest compared to the cost of not having one: an estate passing under the intestacy rules, or a disputed will, can generate legal costs many times greater than the original document would have.
Find out about Wills →A will can be challenged on several legal grounds. Lack of testamentary capacity — the deceased did not understand what they were signing at the time the will was made. Undue influence — the deceased was pressured or coerced into making the will or including particular provisions. Fraud or forgery — the will or a signature was fabricated. Lack of knowledge and approval — the deceased signed a document without understanding or approving its contents. Improper execution — the will was not signed and witnessed in accordance with the Wills Act 1837. A separate but related claim is under the Inheritance (Provision for Family and Dependants) Act 1975, where the will fails to make reasonable financial provision for an eligible person. Each ground has different evidential requirements and time limits.
Find out about Inheritance & Will Disputes →Dying without a will means the intestacy rules decide who inherits your estate — and the result may be nothing like what you would have chosen. Under intestacy, your estate passes to blood relatives in a fixed legal order: spouse or civil partner first, then children, then more distant relatives. Unmarried partners inherit nothing, regardless of how long they have been together. Close friends, step-children, and carers are also excluded entirely. If you have no traceable relatives, your estate passes to the Crown. The intestacy rules take no account of your relationships, your wishes, or your circumstances — only your legal status at the time of death.
Find out about Wills →A deputy is a person appointed by the Court of Protection to make ongoing decisions on behalf of someone who lacks mental capacity and has no lasting power of attorney in place. Deputies are most commonly appointed to manage property and financial affairs — paying bills, managing bank accounts, dealing with property, and handling investments. Personal welfare deputies, who make decisions about care and medical treatment, are appointed much less frequently because the court prefers to make one-off decisions on welfare matters rather than grant ongoing authority. A deputyship is typically sought by a family member when a relative has lost capacity — through dementia, a stroke, or a serious accident — and there is no LPA that could be used instead.
Find out about Court of Protection & Deputyship →Didn't find what you were looking for? Speak to one of our wills, trusts & estates specialists directly.
Practical advice you can read at your own pace
Plain-English guides and articles from our wills, trusts & estates team.
Who inherits when there's no will? Intestacy rules explained
Dying without a will means a fixed legal formula decides who inherits, not you. Spouses, children and the £322,000 statutory legacy explained, plus who gets nothing.
Do I need probate?
Probate isn't always required. Whether you need a grant depends on what the person owned and how they owned it. Here's how to tell, and what to do first.
Executor taking too long? Your rights as a beneficiary
Executors are expected to distribute within about a year, with no hard deadline. Your rights as a beneficiary, when a delay is a real problem, and what to do.
DIY Probate vs Using a Solicitor: An Honest Cost Comparison
DIY probate costs £300 if the estate is straightforward. Solicitors charge £1,500–£10,000+. Here's what can go wrong, who should DIY, and the real liability risks.
Across South Wales and the South West
Cardiff
6 Park Place, Cardiff, CF10 3RS
029 2023 7777
Visit office pageSwansea
Princess Quarter, 18 Princess Way, Swansea, SA1 3LW
01792 720 721
Visit office pageBarry
6 St Nicholas Road, Barry, CF62 6QW
01446 745 660
Visit office pageBristol
Trym Lodge,1 Henbury Road, Westbury-On-Trym, Bristol, BS9 3HQ
Appointment only0117 325 9545
Visit office pageNewport
8a Pentonville, Newport, NP20 5HB
Appointment only01633 742 741
Visit office pageGet started with our wills, trusts & estates team
Confidential, no pressure, and we'll explain what's involved before you commit to anything.