Can an executor refuse to act?
Yes. Being named as an executor does not force you to take the role. You can renounce (give it up completely) or have power reserved (let another executor act while keeping the option to step in later). This is only available if you have not already started dealing with the estate — once you "intermeddle," you usually have to continue.
Detailed explanation
Executorship is a duty you can decline. If you are named in a will but do not want to act, you have three main options before applying for probate:
- Renounce. You sign a formal deed of renunciation and give up the role entirely. This is filed at the Probate Registry, and you take on no responsibility.
- Have power reserved. Where there is more than one executor, the others can take the grant while your appointment is "reserved." You do nothing now, but can apply later if needed.
- Appoint an attorney. You can authorise someone else (often a solicitor) to act on your behalf under a power of attorney for the administration.
The crucial restriction is intermeddling. If you have already begun acting as executor — collecting the deceased's money, paying their bills, selling possessions, or dealing with their bank — you are treated as having accepted the role and can no longer simply renounce. At that point, stepping back usually requires a court application to be removed.
If no named executor is willing or able to act, the estate does not go unadministered. Someone entitled under the will or intestacy rules can instead apply for "letters of administration with will annexed" to take over the administration.
Anita is named as one of two executors in her uncle's will but lives abroad and does not want the responsibility. Because she has not touched the estate, she signs a deed of renunciation, and her co-executor applies for probate alone. Had Anita already withdrawn money from her uncle's account to pay a bill, she would have intermeddled and lost the right to renounce.
Sources
- Senior Courts Act 1981, section 5 and Non-Contentious Probate Rules 1987 — legislation.gov.uk
- GOV.UK — Applying for probate
- Citizens Advice — Dealing with the estate of someone who has died
- Reviewed by
- Michael Smith, Estate Planning Specialist
- Last reviewed
- June 2026
- Next review
- December 2026
- Jurisdiction
- England & Wales
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