What are the Success Rates of Contesting a Will in the UK?

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Success rates for contesting a Will in 2026 vary by grounds. While Lack of Capacity claims have a 60% settlement rate due to medical evidence, Undue Influence remains the hardest to prove, with fewer than 15% succeeding at trial.

Read our complete guide on contesting a will for lack of capacity.

Success Rates of Contesting a Will

In 2026, the success of a claim isn’t just measured by a High Court judgment. In fact, 90% of successful Will contests never reach a courtroom. They are resolved in Mediation.

The “success rate” is heavily influenced by the Cost-Benefit Rule. Because legal fees in a contested probate trial can exceed £100,000 per side, executors are often advised to settle if a claimant has even a 50/50 chance of winning. Therefore, a “successful” contest is usually one that ends in a negotiated settlement.

The probability of winning depends entirely on the “Grounds” you choose. In 2026, the data shows a clear hierarchy of success:

Ground for ContestingEst. Success Rate (Settlement)Difficulty LevelPrimary Evidence Needed
Lack of Proper Execution85%LowWitness testimony, lack of signatures
Lack of Testamentary Capacity65%MediumMedical records, “The Golden Rule”
Lack of Knowledge & Approval45%HighProof the testator didn’t understand the Will
Undue Influence15%ExtremeProof of coercion (not just persuasion)
Forgery/Fraud10%ExtremeHandwriting experts, IP/Digital logs

The single biggest predictor of success in 2026 is whether the drafting solicitor followed the “Golden Rule.” This rule dictates that when an elderly or ill person makes a Will, their capacity should be witnessed and approved by a medical professional.

If a solicitor failed to obtain a medical report for a vulnerable testator, the Will is immediately “suspicious.” In these cases, the success rate for a Lack of Capacity claim jumps from 60% to nearly 80% in mediation.

Immediate Stop

Prevents the Grant of Probate from being issued, freezing the estate for 6 months.

Information Gathering

Securing the drafting solicitor’s file to see exactly what happened when the Will was signed.

Formal Notice

Setting out the legal grounds and evidence to the executors.

Medical & Witness

Reviewing capacity reports or witness statements to find “cracks” in the Will’s validity.

The Settlement Zone

Mediation where 9 out of 10 successful claims are finalized.

Legal Finality


A court-approved document that officially changes the distribution of the estate.

While success rates are high for well-evidenced claims, the 2026 courts are increasingly using Cost Orders to punish “speculative” claims. If you contest a Will without strong evidence and lose, you won’t just walk away with nothing — you may be ordered to pay the estate’s legal fees, which can lead to financial ruin. This is why most specialists only accept cases on a No Win No Fee basis if they believe the success rate is over 60%.

A ground that has seen a surge in success in 2026 is Proprietary Estoppel. This applies when a testator promised a beneficiary an asset (like a farm or house), the beneficiary relied on that promise to their detriment (e.g., working for low wages), and the Will then left that asset to someone else. These claims have a high success rate because they rely on factual history rather than the testator’s state of mind.

In 2026, the success rate of Will contests is heavily influenced by the Pre-Trial Review (PTR). This is a mandatory hearing 4–8 weeks before a trial where a judge scrutinizes the evidence. The judge’s primary goal is to assess whether the case genuinely requires a full trial or if the parties are being “unreasonable.”

If a judge signals that one side’s evidence is weak, it often triggers a 24-hour “settlement window.” Data from 2026 indicates that 40% of cases that survive until the PTR settle immediately afterward, as the “loser pays” risk becomes an imminent reality. For a claimant, surviving the PTR is a massive indicator of a successful financial outcome, even if the case never reaches a final verdict.

The single most effective tool for increasing your success rate in 2026 is the Lachesis Request. This is a formal demand for the drafting solicitor’s complete file, including their initial meeting notes, drafts, and observations of the testator’s mental state.

If the file reveals that the solicitor didn’t meet the testator alone, or failed to ask open-ended questions about their family, the Will’s validity becomes highly questionable. In 2026, solicitors who encounter a “messy” Lachesis file often advise executors to settle for 30-50% of the claim value immediately, rather than risk a public loss in court. This makes the Lachesis Request the “X-ray” of probate litigation — it shows you exactly where the Will is broken before you spend a penny on a trial.

For more technical details on the 2026 legal standards and success thresholds, you can consult the official UK Government Guide on Inheriting if there is no Will and the Law Society’s Practice Note on Wills and Testamentary Capacity.

Contesting a will could become an overwhelming experience if not accompanied by expert guidance and support. Our mission is to provide you with all the needed information, support, and authority to get through this journey, with only one goal in mind: Fairness.

To our team, this process is not about winning; it’s about claiming what was yours from the beginning.

Get your free, no-obligation case assessment. Call 08002980029 or visit contestawilltoday.com

Lack of Proper Execution. If the Will wasn’t signed in the presence of two independent witnesses simultaneously, it is invalid. This is a “black and white” legal fact, making it the easiest ground to win.

No. In 2026, roughly 95% of probate disputes are settled via mediation or negotiation. Court trials are seen as a last resort due to the high costs and emotional toll.

It acts as a “filter.” Since solicitors take the financial risk, they will only accept cases with high success rates. If a specialist offers you a No Win No Fee agreement, it is a strong indicator that your claim has a high probability of success.

Meet Our Founder

With over 30 years of experience across civil litigation and dispute resolution, DS Bal brings a deep, broad understanding of the legal process to every case. His background spans complex disputes involving individuals, families, and estates. LinkedIn
DS Bal Founder Contest A Will Today

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Frequently asked questions.

Can A Will Be Contested?

Yes, a will can be contested if there are valid legal grounds to challenge its validity.

There are several types of trusts used in estate planning, each serving a different purpose depending on your goals.

  • Breach of Trust: Mismanagement of assets by the trustee.

  • Trustee Removal: Conflicts leading to the removal of a trustee.

  • Interpretation: Disagreements over the trust’s legal wording.

  • Undue Influence: Pressure on the creator to change trust terms.

  • Financial Claims: Beneficiaries claiming they haven’t received their fair share.

Contesting a Will:

  • This specifically refers to challenging the validity of the will itself.

  • Common grounds include claims that the deceased lacked mental capacity, the will was forged, or they were under “undue influence” when signing it.

Contentious Probate:

  • This is a broader term that covers any dispute arising after someone’s death during the administration of the estate.

No, you do not always have to go to court. Most probate disputes are resolved through:

  • Mediation: A professional mediator helps both sides reach an agreement without a judge.

  • Negotiation: Solicitors from both sides negotiate a fair settlement privately.

  • Settlement Agreements: A legal contract is signed to end the dispute outside of court.

  • Court as a Last Resort: Litigation is only used if all other attempts to settle fail.

 

 

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