Disinherited in BC
Wills Variation
Disinherited in BC? How Long You Have to Challenge a Will
By Wills Variation and Estate Litigation Lawyer Tim Louis
Quick answer
If you have been disinherited in British Columbia, do not wait for the family dispute to sort itself out.
For a BC wills variation claim, the proceeding must usually be started within 180 days from the date the representation grant is issued in British Columbia. That is not the same as 180 days from death. It may also not be the day you first saw the Will or learned you were left out.
That timing catches people by surprise.
You may be waiting for the executor to call back. You may not have the full Will. Family members may be telling you there is nothing you can do. Meanwhile, probate may be moving forward and the deadline may be getting closer.
A wills variation claim is usually brought by a spouse or child of the will-maker who says the Will did not make adequate provision for proper maintenance and support. It is not about changing every Will that feels unfair. The court looks at the facts, the estate, the relationship, and the will-maker's legal and moral obligations.
If you were left out, received much less than expected, or have been kept in the dark about probate, speak with a lawyer before you assume there is nothing you can do.
Tim Louis & Company Law offers free consultations for people in British Columbia who have been disinherited, treated unfairly in a Will, or worried about missing an estate deadline. Call (604) 732-7678 or email [email protected].
Key takeaways
- In a BC wills variation claim, the 180-day deadline usually runs from the date the representation grant is issued in British Columbia, not from the date of death.
- A spouse or child of the will-maker may be able to bring a wills variation claim if the Will did not make adequate provision for proper maintenance and support.
- Being hurt, disappointed, or surprised by a Will is not enough on its own. The facts matter.
- A wills variation claim is different from arguing that the Will is invalid because of undue influence, lack of capacity, improper signing, or another legal issue.
- The safest first step is to understand the Will, the probate status, the deadline, and your options before time becomes the problem.
Start with the deadline
If you have been disinherited, the first question is not whether the Will feels unfair.
The first question is time.
In BC, a wills variation claim is usually tied to the date the representation grant is issued in British Columbia. This is the court document that gives the executor authority to deal with the estate. Once it is issued, the 180-day period can begin to run.
You may know the date of death. You may know when the funeral happened. You may know when someone first told you what the Will says. None of those dates necessarily tells you when the wills variation deadline expires.
You need to know whether probate has been granted.
That can be difficult if the executor is not communicating. You may be getting vague answers. You may be told that everything is being handled. You may be told there is no point asking questions because the Will is final.
Do not rely on that.
A Will can be legally valid and still be reviewed by the court under BC's wills variation law. The question is whether the Will made adequate provision for a spouse or child in the circumstances. That is a legal question, not a family vote.
Start gathering information. Ask whether probate has been granted. Look for a copy of the Will. Write down when you first learned you were left out or received less than expected. Keep notes of what the executor has said, and what has not been answered.
You do not need to know the whole case before calling a lawyer. You need to know whether time is becoming a problem.
What "challenging a Will" can mean in BC
People often say they want to challenge a Will. That phrase can mean more than one thing.
Sometimes the concern is fairness. A spouse may have been left with little support after years of marriage. An adult child may have been cut out while others received the estate. A person may have been promised something during the will-maker's lifetime and then discovered the Will says something else.
In that situation, the issue may be a wills variation claim. The Will may be valid, but the court is being asked to decide whether it made adequate provision for the will-maker's spouse or children.
That is different from saying the Will itself is invalid.
A Will may be challenged on other grounds. Someone may believe the will-maker did not have capacity when the Will was made. There may be concern that another person pressured or controlled the will-maker. There may be a problem with how the Will was signed or witnessed.
These are different claims. They may require different evidence and different court steps.
If you were left out of a Will, slow the question down. Are you saying the Will is valid but unfair? Are you saying the Will should not be accepted as valid at all? Are you unsure because you have not seen the full document?
Those questions shape the next step. A lawyer can help identify whether the issue is wills variation, undue influence, capacity, improper signing, executor conduct, or something else.
Who can bring a wills variation claim in BC
Not everyone who is disappointed by a Will can bring a wills variation claim.
In British Columbia, this type of claim is usually limited to the will-maker's spouse or children. A spouse can include a married spouse. It can also include someone who lived with the will-maker in a marriage-like relationship for at least two years, unless the relationship had legally ended for WESA purposes.
Children may include adult children. A claim is not automatically defeated because the child is grown, financially independent, or living apart from the parent.
But eligibility is only the first question.
A wills variation claim is not based only on hurt feelings, surprise, or a sense that the Will was unfair. The court looks at whether the Will made adequate provision for proper maintenance and support, given the circumstances.
Those circumstances can include the size of the estate, the relationship history, the needs of the spouse or child, the will-maker's reasons, gifts made during the will-maker's lifetime, and the claims of other people connected to the estate.
You may know who provided care. You may know what was promised. You may know why the disinheritance came as a shock. Those facts may matter, but they need to be organized around the legal claim.
If you are unsure whether you qualify as a spouse or child under BC law, get advice before deciding that you have no claim.
When the 180-day clock starts
The 180-day deadline in a BC wills variation claim does not usually start on the date of death. It starts from the date the representation grant is issued in British Columbia.
A representation grant is the court document that gives the executor or administrator authority to deal with the estate. People often refer to this as probate, although the exact wording can depend on the type of grant.
The problem is that you may not know when that grant has been issued.
You may not know when the executor applied for probate. You may not have received a full copy of the Will. You may be waiting for someone to call back. You may have been told that nothing can be done.
Do not assume waiting is safe.
The deadline is tied to the representation grant, not to when you feel ready to deal with the dispute. It is also not necessarily tied to the day you first learned you were disinherited.
After the proceeding is started, a copy of the initiating pleading must also be served on the executor no later than 30 days after the 180-day period expires, unless the court extends the time for service.
If you are worried about a Will, start by finding out whether a representation grant has been issued in British Columbia. From there, a lawyer can help you understand the deadline, whether you may have a claim, and what needs to happen next.
Executor silence and what to gather
Silence from an executor can make the estate feel as if it is happening behind a closed door.
You may not know whether probate has been applied for. You may not know whether a representation grant has been issued. You may not have the full Will. You may be getting second-hand updates from family members, or no updates at all.
That can leave you waiting for a call that never comes.
Patience has its place in estate matters. But it should not replace legal advice if a deadline may be running.
Executor silence does not always mean something improper has happened. Estates can take time. Probate applications can be delayed. Documents may need to be gathered. Still, if you may have a claim, silence should not be the reason you miss the chance to act.
Start with facts, not accusations. Keep emails, letters, texts, and notes of phone calls. Write down when you asked for information and what response you received. If you have not seen the Will, make a note of that. If you do not know whether probate has been granted, make a note of that too.
You do not need to arrive with a perfect file. Most people do not have one.
Helpful documents and information may include:
- a copy of the Will, if you have one
- any probate notice or estate court documents
- the date of death and the name of the executor
- emails, letters, texts, or notes from the executor
- names of beneficiaries and close family members
- notes about when you learned you were left out or received less than expected
- information about your relationship with the will-maker
- records of financial support, caregiving, dependency, or promises made
- anything that suggests sudden changes to the Will
- concerns about capacity, pressure, isolation, or undue influence
Do not worry if some of this is missing.
The first meeting is not about proving the entire case. It is about understanding the Will, the probate status, your relationship to the will-maker, and whether time is becoming a problem.
What if you suspect undue influence or lack of capacity?
Sometimes the problem is not only that the Will feels unfair. It is how the Will was made.
You may be worried because the will-maker changed the Will after becoming ill, isolated, dependent, or unusually reliant on one person. A long-standing plan may have disappeared. Someone who had always been close may have been cut out. A new person may have taken control of appointments, visitors, finances, or access to the will-maker.
Those facts do not automatically mean the Will is invalid. They do mean the situation should be looked at carefully.
Undue influence and lack of capacity are different from a wills variation claim. In a wills variation claim, the Will may be valid, but a spouse or child argues that it failed to make adequate provision for proper maintenance and support.
In an undue influence or capacity case, the question is more basic: should this Will be accepted as valid at all?
Capacity looks at whether the will-maker had the legal ability to make the Will. Undue influence looks at whether pressure, control, or dependence affected the will-maker's true intentions.
These concerns usually depend on evidence: medical records, the drafting lawyer's notes, witness information, family history, financial records, changes in care, changes in access, or the timing of the Will. Small details can matter. Who arranged the appointment? Who was present? Who benefited from the change? Who became isolated?
You do not need to know the legal label before speaking with a lawyer. You may only know that something about the Will does not feel right. That is enough reason to ask what the law requires, what evidence may matter, and whether time is becoming a problem.
What not to do if you may have a claim
If you think you may have a claim, try not to let grief, anger, or family pressure decide your next step.
Estate disputes can become personal quickly. A text message can be forwarded. An email can be misunderstood. A family conversation can later be described very differently by someone else. Time can also pass while people tell you to wait.
Be careful not to:
- wait for the executor to become more cooperative
- assume the deadline starts from the date of death
- assume there is nothing you can do because the Will is final
- rely only on what another beneficiary tells you
- sign a release, consent, or estate document without advice
- send angry messages that may later be used against you
- take estate property
- threaten litigation before understanding the claim
- ignore concerns about capacity, pressure, or sudden Will changes
- assume you have no claim because you are an adult child
You do not have to start a fight to protect your position. You also should not wait passively while probate moves forward.
The better step is quieter and more practical: gather what you have, find out whether probate has been granted, and speak with a lawyer before the deadline or the family conflict controls the situation.
How Tim Louis & Company Law can help
If you have been disinherited, you may not yet know what kind of legal problem you are dealing with.
That is normal.
You may be wondering whether the Will can be changed. You may be worried that the Will was made under pressure. You may not know whether probate has been granted, whether the 180-day period has started, or whether the executor is giving you the full picture.
You may only know this: something feels wrong, and no one is giving you a clear answer.
Tim Louis & Company Law can help you slow the situation down and look at it properly. This may include reviewing the Will, the probate status, any representation grant, the family history, the size and nature of the estate, the reasons for the disinheritance, and any concerns about capacity, undue influence, or executor conduct.
The first question is not always, "Can I sue?" Often, the better first question is: "What exactly is the legal issue?"
If you wait too long, you may lose options. If you react too quickly, you may make the family conflict worse before you understand your legal position.
If you were left out of a Will, received less than expected, or are being kept in the dark about probate, Tim Louis & Company Law can help you review the Will, the deadline, and your options.
Call (604) 732-7678 or email [email protected] for a free consultation.
Frequently asked questions about being disinherited in BC
How long do I have to challenge a Will in BC?
For a BC wills variation claim, the proceeding must usually be started within 180 days from the date the representation grant is issued in British Columbia. A copy of the initiating pleading must also be served on the executor no later than 30 days after the 180-day period expires, unless the court extends the time for service.
Does the 180-day deadline start from the date of death?
Usually, no. For a wills variation claim in BC, the deadline is tied to the representation grant issued in British Columbia. That is why it is important to find out whether probate has been granted.
Who can bring a wills variation claim in BC?
A wills variation claim is usually available to the will-maker's spouse or children. A spouse can include a married spouse or someone who lived with the will-maker in a marriage-like relationship for at least two years, unless the relationship had legally ended for WESA purposes. Children may include adult children.
What if I think the Will was changed because of pressure or lack of capacity?
That may raise concerns about undue influence or capacity. These issues are different from wills variation because they ask whether the Will should be accepted as valid at all. If the Will changed after illness, isolation, dependence, conflict, or heavy involvement by one person, speak with a lawyer about what evidence may matter.
What if the executor is not communicating?
Do not wait passively. Executor silence does not always mean something improper has happened, but it can make it harder to know whether probate has been granted or whether a deadline is running. Keep records and get advice if you may have been disinherited or treated unfairly.
Further reading
These resources may help if you are trying to understand a Will, probate timing, executor silence, disinheritance, or a possible estate dispute in British Columbia. They are not a substitute for legal advice about your own situation.
BC Wills, Estates and Succession Act
https://www.bclaws.gov.bc.ca/civix/document/id/complete/statreg/09013_01
BC Supreme Court Civil Rules
https://www.bclaws.gov.bc.ca/civix/document/id/complete/statreg/168_2009_00
Wills Variation Lawyer
Wills Variation in BC
Contest a Will
Probate Lawyer Vancouver
Estate Litigation and Undue Influence
https://timlouislaw.com/estate-litigation-and-undue-influence/
My Executor Won't Communicate. What Can Beneficiaries Do in BC?
BC Probate Timeline: How Long Probate Takes, What Delays It, What to Do First
Will Mistakes That Cause Delay
Before you wait, find out whether time is already running
If you have been disinherited in BC, waiting can feel easier than starting a legal conversation.
You may not want to upset the family. You may not want to look greedy. You may hope the executor will eventually explain what is happening. You may still be trying to process the death itself.
Those feelings are understandable. But they do not tell you whether a deadline is running.
If you were left out of a Will, received much less than expected, or are being kept in the dark about probate, the safest first step is to find out where things stand.
Has probate been granted? Has the representation grant been issued? Are you a spouse or child under BC law? Is the issue fairness, capacity, undue influence, executor conduct, or something else?
You do not have to accuse anyone before getting advice. You only need to understand your position before time moves past you.
Tim Louis & Company Law can help you review the Will, the probate status, the deadline, and your options before you decide what to do next.
Call (604) 732-7678 or email [email protected] for a free consultation.
General legal information only
This article provides general legal information only and is not legal advice. Every estate dispute depends on the Will, the probate status, the deadlines, the family history, the evidence, and the facts of the case. If you have been disinherited, treated unfairly, or kept in the dark about probate, speak with a lawyer about your specific situation.
If you have been disinherited in British Columbia, do not wait for the family dispute to sort itself out.
For a BC wills variation claim, the proceeding must usually be started within 180 days from the date the representation grant is issued in British Columbia.
A wills variation claim is usually brought by a spouse or child of the will-maker who says the Will did not make adequate provision for proper maintenance and support.
The 180-day deadline for a BC wills variation claim usually runs from the date the representation grant is issued in British Columbia, not from the date of death.
A spouse or child may be able to bring a wills variation claim if the Will did not make adequate provision for proper maintenance and support.
A wills variation claim is different from a claim that the Will is invalid because of undue influence, lack of capacity, improper signing, or another legal problem.
If the executor is not communicating, find out whether probate has been granted and get advice before assuming waiting is safe.
Author and Legal Authority
About Tim Louis, LLB
Wills variation, probate, and estate litigation guidance for people in British Columbia who have been disinherited, treated unfairly in a Will, or kept in the dark about probate.
Tim Louis is a Vancouver-based lawyer with more than 40 years of experience helping people across British Columbia with probate, Wills, estate litigation, wills variation, long-term disability, employment law, and personal injury matters.
In estate matters, he helps people slow the situation down, identify the real legal issue, and understand whether the concern involves wills variation, probate timing, executor silence, undue influence, capacity, or another estate dispute problem.
Wills variation focus
Guidance for spouses and children who may have been left out of a Will, received less than expected, or are worried about missing a BC estate deadline.
Estate litigation clarity
Help distinguishing a fairness concern from a validity issue such as undue influence, lack of capacity, suspicious changes, or signing problems.
Probate timing awareness
Support for readers trying to understand probate status, representation grants, executor communication, and why waiting can create risk.
- Location
- Vancouver, BC
- Education
- LLB, University of British Columbia
- Primary focus for this article
- Disinheritance, wills variation deadlines, representation grants, executor silence, undue influence, capacity, and estate litigation risk
- Related practice areas
- Probate, Wills, estate planning, estate litigation, employment, LTD, and personal injury
- Phone
- (604) 732-7678
- [email protected]
If you have been disinherited, received less than expected, or are unsure whether probate has been granted, Tim Louis can help you understand the deadline, the Will, and the safest next step.
Free consultation. Phone first. General information only, not legal advice.
Living Content System™
Reviewed for deadline clarity, probate timing, and estate dispute context
This page is maintained to keep British Columbia wills variation and estate litigation guidance clear, useful, and easier to understand for readers who may have been disinherited, treated unfairly in a Will, or kept in the dark about probate.
Last reviewed
Reviewed by Tim Louis
What this page is designed to do
This guide helps readers understand that being disinherited in British Columbia is often time-sensitive. It explains why the 180-day wills variation deadline is usually tied to the date the representation grant is issued in British Columbia, not simply the date of death, the funeral, or the day someone first learned they were left out.
Reviewed by
Tim Louis, Vancouver lawyer
Legal area
Wills variation, probate, estate litigation, and estate deadline risk in British Columbia
What this page helps with
Understanding the 180-day period, representation grants, executor silence, eligibility, and the difference between fairness and validity concerns
Built for
Spouses, children, adult children, beneficiaries, and family members worried about disinheritance or probate timing
Reader problem
The reader has been left out of a Will, received less than expected, or is unsure whether probate has already started the wills variation clock.
Hidden risk
The reader may wait for the executor to explain things, assume the deadline starts from death, or rely on family assurances while the representation grant date may already matter.
Practical next step
Find out whether a representation grant has been issued, gather the Will and executor communications, and get advice before waiting becomes the problem.
Related help and next steps
Need help applying this to your situation? If you were left out of a Will, received much less than expected, or do not know whether probate has been granted, Tim Louis can help you review the Will, the probate status, the deadline, and your options.
Free consultation. Phone first. General information only, not legal advice. Every estate situation is fact-specific.
If you have been disinherited in British Columbia, do not wait for the family dispute to sort itself out.
For a BC wills variation claim, the proceeding must usually be started within 180 days from the date the representation grant is issued in British Columbia.
A wills variation claim is usually brought by a spouse or child who says the Will did not make adequate provision for proper maintenance and support.
The 180-day deadline for a BC wills variation claim usually runs from the date the representation grant is issued in British Columbia, not from the date of death.
A spouse or child may be able to bring a wills variation claim if the Will did not make adequate provision for proper maintenance and support.
A wills variation claim is different from a claim that the Will is invalid because of undue influence, lack of capacity, improper signing, or another legal problem.
If the executor is not communicating, find out whether probate has been granted and get advice before assuming waiting is safe.
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- probate
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