What is Executor? A Guide for Singapore Residents
An executor is the person you appoint in your will to carry out your wishes after death. They manage the estate, apply for probate, pay debts, and distribute
Plain-Language Definition
An executor is the person you appoint in your will to carry out your wishes after death. They manage the estate, apply for probate, pay debts, and distribute
Miao Ling's Advisory Perspective
“Choosing the right executor is as important as writing the will itself — the executor needs to be willing, capable, and available when the time comes. Many people appoint a spouse without considering what happens if the spouse predeceases them.”
— Miao Ling Lim, Certified Estate Planner
An executor is the person named in a will who is responsible for carrying out the will-maker’s instructions after death. The executor has legal authority to administer the estate — collecting assets, paying debts, applying for probate, and distributing the estate to beneficiaries.
The executor is often described as the project manager of the estate.
In Singapore
Any adult who is mentally capable can be named as an executor in a Singapore will. There is no requirement that the executor be a professional or a lawyer — though professional executors (banks, law firms, trust companies) are available if preferred.
The executor’s responsibilities include:
- Locating the original will and notifying the relevant parties
- Applying for a Grant of Probate from the Family Justice Courts
- Identifying and valuing all assets — bank accounts, property, investments, business interests
- Paying outstanding debts, taxes, and estate expenses
- Distributing the net estate to beneficiaries as directed by the will
- Filing accounts if required
This process is not quick. Even a straightforward estate administration takes 6 to 18 months from death to final distribution.
Choosing the Right Executor
The executor role requires:
- Availability — the executor needs to be in Singapore (or accessible) and able to devote time to the process
- Capability — some administrative and financial literacy is needed
- Trust — the executor has significant authority over the estate
- Longevity — the executor needs to outlive the will-maker; naming only a spouse without an alternate is a common oversight
Many people name a spouse as sole executor. This is often appropriate, but it creates a gap if the spouse predeceases the will-maker, becomes incapacitated, or is too grieved to act effectively. Naming an alternate executor addresses this.
Executor vs Trustee
These roles are related but distinct:
- The executor administers the estate through probate — collecting assets, paying debts, distributing
- The trustee manages any trust that continues after probate — for example, a testamentary trust for minor children
Often the same person holds both roles. Sometimes it is appropriate to separate them — for example, appointing a family member as executor (to handle the immediate administration) and a professional as trustee (to manage ongoing trust obligations over years or decades).
Professional Executors
For estates with significant complexity, international assets, or where no suitable individual executor exists, professional executors (trust companies or banks licensed by MAS) provide a reliable alternative. They charge fees but eliminate the risk of individual executor issues.
Common Mistakes
Naming only one executor with no alternate. If the executor predeceases the will-maker, the estate needs court intervention to appoint an administrator.
Not informing the executor. An executor who discovers their role for the first time at the reading of the will is unprepared to act promptly.
Appointing someone unsuitable. Choosing an executor out of sentiment rather than capability can cause significant delays and complications during estate administration.
Confusing the executor with the trustee. They handle different things. A will should be clear about whether the same person holds both roles.
See how Executor applies to your situation
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