Ready in 30 minutesCivil Code guidedPrivate by design

Protect Your Family's Pamana

Create a guided online will for Philippine succession law in less time than it takes to grab merienda.

A Filipino family — protect their pamana with a will guided by Philippine law

Civil Code guided

Articles 783–839

How It Works

Your will, ready in four simple steps

1

Answer guided questions

A conversational questionnaire walks you through every detail Philippine law requires.

2

Review your draft

See your generated will inline. Edit anything before paying — preview is free.

3

Pay once when you're ready

One-time fee. No subscription. Free updates for a full year if your situation changes.

4

Print and execute

Step-by-step execution guide for both notarial and holographic wills.

Civil Code guided

Articles 783–839

Privacy-aware

RA 10173 aligned

Encrypted data

TLS 1.3 + AES-256

Free Inheritance Calculator

Free Inheritance Calculator

See how your estate would be divided under Philippine law

Under Philippine law, parents only inherit when there are no legitimate children.

Sample Estate Breakdown

Spouse25%
Children50%
Free Portion25%

Based on Art. 886–903, Philippine Civil Code

Simple Pricing

Save up to 97% vs. a lawyer

Estate lawyers charge ₱15,000–50,000 to draft a simple will. Pamana is a one-time purchase, with pricing shown at checkout.

Pamana Complete

₱15,000–50,000private lawyer
Loading priceone-time

No subscription · Free updates for 1 year

  • Notarial Will + Holographic Reference
  • Bilingual: English & Tagalog
  • Inheritance / Legitime Calculator
  • Step-by-step execution guide
  • Unlimited codicils for minor amendments
  • Guided by Philippine Civil Code rules
  • Bank-grade encryption (AES-256, TLS 1.3)
Get Started

Preview your will free before paying. Pay only when you're ready to download.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Everything you need to know about creating your Philippine will

Is a will from Pamana legally binding in the Philippines?
Yes, when properly executed. Pamana generates documents that comply with the Civil Code of the Philippines. A notarial will must be signed in front of a notary public with three witnesses (Article 805). A holographic will must be entirely handwritten, dated, and signed by you (Article 810). We provide step-by-step guides for both — your will becomes legally binding once you complete those steps.
What law is Pamana based on?
Pamana is built around the Civil Code rules for Philippine wills and succession, including Articles 783–839 for wills and related execution requirements.
Should I have my own lawyer review my will?
For many straightforward estates, Pamana can help you prepare a clear, legally-guided will. If you have a complex estate, a blended family, business interests, foreign assets, or a likely dispute, we recommend consulting a private lawyer as well.
What happens to my data?
Your data is encrypted in transit and at rest, stored on secured infrastructure, and handled under our privacy policy. We never sell your personal information, and you can delete your account and associated data from Settings.
How long does it take?
Most people can finish the guided questionnaire and preview a draft in about 30 minutes. You can save your progress and return whenever you're ready.
Can I update my will later?
Yes. For one full year after purchase, all updates are free — you can either start a new version (replaces the old will entirely) or add a codicil, a short amendment that sits alongside the original. Your base purchase is one-time and never recurring.
What if I move abroad or my situation changes?
Life changes are exactly why wills should be revisited. You can update your Pamana draft when you marry, separate, have children, acquire major assets, move abroad, or change your executor. If another country's law may apply, ask a local lawyer to review your plan.
Pamana

Online wills built for Philippine succession law.

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Company

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