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Home→Tools→Signing Requirements Checker→Colorado→Will

What Do I Need to Sign My Will in Colorado?

Witness, notary, and remote online notarization (RON) requirements for wills in Colorado.

Frequently Asked Questions

Colorado requires 2 witnesses for a will.C.R.S. § 15-11-502Verified May 30, 2026 Witnesses must be at least 18 years old.

Notarization is not required for a will to be valid in Colorado.C.R.S. § 15-11-502Verified May 30, 2026 However, notarization Makes the will self-proving, avoiding witness testimony at probate.

Colorado allows Remote Online Notarization (RON) for wills.C.R.S. § 15-11-502Verified May 30, 2026 The notarization can be completed via secure video call with an approved RON provider, without meeting in person. The state also accepts out-of-state RON.

To execute a will in Colorado: Find 2 adults to serve as witnesses. Review witness restrictions to ensure eligibility. Get the document notarized (standard practice, not required). Sign digitally from anywhere via video call

Yes. Colorado has adopted the Uniform Probate Code, which validates a will under any of three tests: it complied with the law of the place of execution, the law of the testator's domicile when signed, or the law of the testator's domicile at death (UPC § 2-506). A will signed in another state is recognized in Colorado if any of those tests passes. The practical wrinkle is the self-proving affidavit — if the foreign will doesn't have one, witnesses may need to testify during probate. See the Colorado document portability tool for the full breakdown.

Will Signing in Colorado

A will in Colorado needs 2C.R.S. § 15-11-502Verified May 30, 2026 witnesses, with notarization NoC.R.S. § 15-11-502Verified May 30, 2026. A document that doesn't meet these execution requirements can be rejected at the moment it actually matters — at probate intake, in front of a hospital, or at a bank counter.

Colorado allows Remote Online Notarization (RON) for wills and accepts notarizations performed under another state's RON authority. Practically, that means the notarization step can be completed over secure video without finding an in-person notary, and the resulting document is valid in Colorado even if the notary was elsewhere.

The signing rules above are what the Colorado will builder already bakes into the document — witness lines, notary block, and self-proving affidavit where Colorado permits it.

SimplyTrustSimplyTrust Editorial·Updated May 30, 2026

Legal Sources

  • C.R.S. § 15-11-502

Data sourced from Colorado statutes and official state code. How we research.

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Colorado Estate Planning Resources

In-depth guides covering Colorado probate laws, trust requirements, and estate planning strategies.

Colorado Will RequirementsC.R.S. § 15-11-502Verified May 30, 2026

Sign digitally from anywhere via video call

Requirement
Colorado
Witnesses Required
2 adults
Notarization
Standard practice

Digital Signing Options

Will Details

Detail
Colorado
Self-Proving Affidavit
Available - notarized affidavit at signing eliminates witness testimony at probate
Holographic (Handwritten) Wills
Recognized
Beneficiaries as Witnesses
Allowed

This tool provides general information about document execution requirements. Requirements may vary based on specific circumstances. Consult a licensed attorney for advice.Data verified 2026-05-30

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