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Home→Tools→Signing Requirements Checker→South Carolina→Will

What Do I Need to Sign My Will in South Carolina?

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

Frequently Asked Questions

South Carolina requires 2 witnesses for a will.S.C. Code § 62-2-502Verified May 5, 2026 Witnesses must be at least 18 years old.

Notarization is not required for a will to be valid in South Carolina.S.C. Code § 62-2-502Verified May 5, 2026 However, notarization Makes the will self-proving, avoiding witness testimony at probate.

South Carolina has not authorized Remote Online Notarization. In-person notarization is required for all documents, including wills.

To execute a will in South Carolina: Find 2 adults to serve as witnesses. Review witness restrictions to ensure eligibility. Get the document notarized (standard practice, not required). Wet signature and in-person notary required

Yes. South Carolina 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 South Carolina 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 South Carolina document portability tool for the full breakdown.

Will Signing in South Carolina

A will in South Carolina needs 2S.C. Code § 62-2-502Verified May 5, 2026 witnesses, with notarization NoS.C. Code § 62-2-502Verified May 5, 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.

RON is not available in South Carolina, so the notarization step on a will happens in person. Most banks, mail-services stores, and law offices can stamp these — the harder part is usually witnesses, not the notary.

Ready to draft? The South Carolina will builder generates a state-compliant will with the right signature blocks and a self-proving affidavit when the state allows one.

SimplyTrustSimplyTrust Editorial·Updated May 5, 2026

Legal Sources

  • S.C. Code § 62-2-502

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

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South Carolina Estate Planning Resources

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

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