Estate & Wills · Will-maker review
Epilogue review
Epilogue, built by two former estate lawyers, offers the broadest document set of the major platforms and competitive couple pricing — a strong all-rounder, with Quebec coverage worth confirming in the flow.
Best for: People who want the widest document set — including a social-media will — from a lawyer-founded service.
Pros
- Founded and built by two former estate lawyers
- Widest document set — including a social-media will and funeral/burial wishes
- Competitive couple pricing ($269 wills only, $329 with incapacity documents)
- Encrypted Canadian data storage and an RBC Royal Trust collaboration
Cons
- Will-only tier ($139) is the most expensive entry price of the three
- Quebec coverage is listed but single-sourced — confirm before relying on it
- Bilingual/French support is not confirmed
What you get and what it costs
Like Willful, Epilogue is one-time pricing, no subscription. Will Only is $139; the popular Will + Incapacity Documents tier is $199, adding a power of attorney for finances and a health-care decision-maker appointment. Couples are well served: $269 for two wills, or $329 with both sets of incapacity documents.
Epilogue’s document set is the broadest here — beyond the will and incapacity documents it includes an asset record, funeral and burial wishes, and a social-media will to direct what happens to your online accounts.
Province coverage and Quebec
Epilogue lists ten provinces including Quebec on its About page. We flag this carefully: it is a single source, and Quebec’s civil-law rules are unusual for these platforms, so confirm Quebec is selectable in the flow before relying on it. For guaranteed Quebec coverage built for the Civil Code, LegalWills.ca is the safer bet.
Is an Epilogue will legally valid?
Yes, on the same terms as any online will: you print and sign before two witnesses who are not beneficiaries, with no notarization required, following the signing instructions Epilogue provides. The document is a standard will — valid once it is executed correctly. Read the estate-planning guide for how powers of attorney and beneficiary designations work alongside it.
Epilogue pricing tiers
Last will & testament on its own.
Will plus power of attorney for finances and a health-care decision-maker appointment.
Two wills for a couple.
Two wills plus both sets of incapacity documents.
Frequently asked questions
How much does Epilogue cost?
Epilogue starts at $139 for a will, with its popular Will + Incapacity Documents tier at $199. Pricing is one-time — no subscription. Verified at Epilogue’s own pricing page on June 13, 2026; compare it against the field on our best online will makers ranking.
Is a Epilogue will legally valid in Canada?
Yes — it produces a standard typed will that becomes legal once you print and sign before two witnesses who are not beneficiaries — no notarization. Detailed signing instructions are provided. It is the correct signing, not the software, that makes a will valid.
Does Epilogue cover Quebec?
Epilogue lists Quebec on its About page, but that is a single source and Quebec’s civil-law will rules are unusual for these platforms — confirm Quebec is selectable in the flow before relying on it.
The bottom line
Epilogue is the document-coverage champion and a strong choice for couples, backed by genuine estate-law pedigree. Choose Willful if you value free lifetime updates and the most polished flow; choose LegalWills.ca if price or guaranteed Quebec coverage is decisive.
Ready to write your will with Epilogue?
Or compare it head-to-head against the other Canadian platforms first.
This review is for educational purposes only and is not legal advice. Our editorial rating reflects price, documents, coverage and experience — it is never paid for. Pricing and features were verified at Epilogue’s own website on June 13, 2026 and change without notice. Whether an online will suits you depends on your circumstances; complex estates should consult a lawyer or notary. Confirm current terms on the platform’s site before purchasing.