Skip to main content
Wills

Substitute Beneficiary

A backup person named to receive a gift if the primary beneficiary dies before the testator or cannot inherit.

What it means

A substitute beneficiary is the fallback recipient named in a Will in case the first-choice beneficiary dies before the testator or otherwise cannot take the gift. Naming substitutes prevents a gift from failing as a lapsed gift and stops part of the estate falling into a partial intestacy. It is one of the most effective safeguards in Will drafting.

How it's used

Substitutes can be named for any gift, including the residue. Example: "I give my home to my brother, but if he does not survive me, to his daughter." Distribution rules like per stirpes and a survivorship clause work together with named substitutes to keep the estate plan robust.

This page is general information about Australian estate-planning terms, not legal advice. See our Legal Disclaimer.

Ready to put it into practice?

Create a legally valid Australian Will online in about 20 minutes.

Start your Will free