Inside Shane Warne’s £12m will – who received what as ex-fiancee Liz Hurley gets nothing

Details of Aussie cricket legend Shane Warne‘s will for his £12million estate have been revealed.

Warne left the vast majority of his fortune to his three children Brooke, 25, Jackson, 23, and Summer, 21, who all received 31% each. Documents released by the Supreme Court in Victoria disclosed his brother Jason will receive 2%, while his niece and nephew Tyla and Sebastian will get 2.5% each.

As reported by the Herald Sun, son Jackson also inherited his vehicle collection which included a Yamaha motorbike, BMW and Mercedes estimated to be worth AUD$375,000 (£216k) altogether.

READ MORE: Shane Warne had almost £3million in his bank account when cricket legend died

The estate was made up of a $6.5m (£3.74m) home in Portsea, Victoria, $5m (£3m) in his Australian bank account, nearly $3m (£1.7m) in shares, $2m (£1.15m) worth of personal belongings, and around $500k (£288k) in an HSBC account.

Warne left nothing to his ex-wife and the mother of his children, Simone Callahan, or British actress Liz Hurley, who he was engaged to before they split in 2013.

What was your favourite moment from Warne’s legendary career? Let us know in the comments section.



Warne’s £12million estate was largely divided between his three children
(Image: Getty Images)

His will was granted probate this week which means the executors he chose can start distributing the estate between the beneficiaries, nearly a year on from his death.

Warne passed away aged 52 in March 2022 during a holiday on the island of Koh Samui, Thailand. He was found unresponsive in his villa after suffering a heart attack.



The Aussie cricket legend was engaged to Hurley before they split in 2013
(Image: Getty Images)

The sporting world was left in mourning for the six-time Ashes winner, who is firmly cemented as one of the greatest cricketers of all-time.

During his legendary career he took 708 Test wickets, the second-most in history behind only Muthiah Muralidaran. More than 50,000 people attended a state funeral at the Melbourne Cricket Ground to pay their respects to him.

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CricketLiz HurleyShane Warne