Revocation

noun

/ˌrɛvəˈkeɪʃən/

In a Nutshell

The cancellation or withdrawal of a will, trust, power of attorney, or other legal document.

PLAIN ENGLISH

Revocation means cancelling a legal document. If you made a will ten years ago and want to cancel it, you can revoke it by destroying it, making a new will that says "I revoke all prior wills," or simply stating in writing that the old will is cancelled.

⏱ When you'll encounter this term

  • Making a new will that supersedes an old one
  • Cancelling a power of attorney you previously granted
  • Destroying an old will or trust document
  • Major life changes requiring estate plan updates
EXAMPLE

"After my divorce, I wanted to revoke my old will that left everything to my ex-wife. My lawyer prepared a new will that began with a revocation clause: 'I hereby revoke all wills and codicils previously made by me.' This ensured my old will was completely cancelled."

⚖️ Compare: Revocation vs Amendment

Revocation

Completely cancels the document. Nothing from old document remains in effect. Start fresh with new document.

Amendment

Changes specific provisions only. Original document remains partially in effect. Modified rather than replaced.

💡 Did you know?

Marriage automatically revokes your will in most Australian states, but divorce doesn't—it only revokes gifts to your ex-spouse. This catches many people off guard who assume divorce cancels their entire will.