laurence
Veteran
- Location
- in the aeroplane over the sea
The witnesses can't be people who benefit from the will, or close relatives of such people. If they are beneficiaries, that bit of the will is invalid but the rest of it remains valid.
There is no specific law saying that relatives can't be witnesses, but the danger is that they will fall foul of the 'not a beneficiary' rule.
The reason witnesses are required is so that they can testify that the will was signed in their presence if there is ever a challenge to its authenticity. Having independent people as witnesses prevents arguments about giving false evidence because of a vested interest in the outcome.
You should also try to choose witnesses who will outlive you.
^^^^^^^ this and this alone. (the entire reply)
also, if you're in Scotland you only need 1 witness. the witness(es) don't have to know what you are signing, just that you have signed. they are witnessing your signature, not that it is a Will.