What Happens If You Die Without a Will? Intestate Succession Explained (US 2026)
IMPORTANT: This guide is for general educational purposes for U.S. adults with relatively simple finances. It is not legal, tax, or financial advice. HeirLight is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice. Laws vary by state; consider consulting a licensed attorney about your specific situation.
What does “dying without a will” mean?
If you die without a will, you die “intestate.”
That means:
- You do not get to choose who inherits your property
- Your state’s intestate succession laws decide who gets what
- A court oversees the process, often through someone it appoints
In other words: no will = your state’s default plan, not your personal plan.
This can work fine for some people. For others, it leads to outcomes they never would have chosen.
What property does intestate succession cover?
Generally, intestate laws apply to property in your name alone, such as:
- Bank accounts without a named beneficiary
- Personal belongings and household items
- Real estate titled solely in your name
- Cars and other vehicles in your name
It usually does not control:
- Life insurance with a named beneficiary
- Retirement accounts with a named beneficiary
- “Payable-on-death” (POD) or “transfer-on-death” (TOD) accounts
- Property owned in certain joint forms that pass automatically to the co-owner
Those assets follow their own contracts or titles.
Who inherits if you die without a will?
Every state has its own formula, but the patterns are similar. Here’s a simplified overview (not state-specific legal advice):
1. You die with a spouse, but no children
In many states, your spouse inherits most or all of your probate property.
Potential issue: if you are separated but still legally married, your spouse may still inherit by default unless a court has officially changed things.
2. You die with a spouse and children
Common patterns:
- If all children are with your current spouse:
- Many states give your spouse a large share (sometimes everything), and the children may receive the rest or inherit only if your spouse dies later.
- If you have children from a previous relationship:
- Many states split your estate between your current spouse and your children from prior relationships.
Potential issues:
- Your current spouse and children from a prior relationship may end up co-owning property together, creating tension.
- You might have preferred to provide more security for your spouse while still protecting children from a previous relationship.
3. You die with children, but no spouse
Usually, your children inherit everything in equal shares.
Potential issues:
- If some children are estranged or financially irresponsible, they still inherit by default.
- If a child has special needs, inheriting directly could affect benefits or require extra planning your state’s default rules do not provide.
4. You die with no spouse and no children
Most states look to your parents next. If your parents are deceased, your siblings (or their children) are usually next in line.
Potential issues:
- A sibling you haven’t spoken to in years may inherit, while a close friend or partner gets nothing.
- Unmarried partners are generally not recognized by intestate laws.
5. You die with no close relatives
States move outward:
- Grandparents
- Aunts and uncles
- Cousins
If the court truly cannot find any relatives, your property eventually goes to the state (this is rare, but it happens).
Common “this is not what I would have wanted” scenarios
Here are a few situations where people are often surprised by intestate rules:
- Unmarried partners
- You live with a long-term partner, but you’re not legally married.
- Intestate laws usually treat them as a legal stranger. They may receive nothing.
- Blended families
- You remarried and have children from different relationships.
- By default, your current spouse and your children may end up sharing property in ways that feel unfair or impractical to either side.
- Parents vs. siblings
- You are single with no children.
- Your estranged parent could inherit everything, even if you’re closer to siblings, nieces, nephews, or friends.
- Special-needs or vulnerable relatives
- Someone you love may need extra protection, not just a simple cash inheritance.
- Intestate laws do not create special structures (like trusts) automatically.
A simple will lets you fix most of these issues easily.
What about debts and taxes?
Dying without a will does not erase your debts.
Generally:
- Your debts are paid from your estate before anything is distributed
- If there’s not enough money, some debts may go unpaid
- Family members usually don’t personally inherit your debts (with some exceptions, like joint accounts or co-signers)
A will doesn’t change this basic order, but it can make your executor’s job much simpler and reduce confusion for your family.
How long does the process take if I die without a will?
It depends on:
- Your state
- How complex your estate is
- Whether relatives agree or fight
Without a will:
- The court may need more time to identify heirs
- It might have to appoint someone to manage your estate
- Disputes can slow everything down
A clear, properly signed will can shorten this process and reduce stress.
How a simple will changes things
With a basic will, you can:
- Choose exactly who inherits, and in what shares
- Protect unmarried partners, stepchildren, friends, or charities
- Name a trusted executor instead of leaving it to the court
- Name guardians for your children or pets
- Reduce the risk of disputes and delays
You’re not trying to outsmart the law. You’re simply replacing the one-size-fits-all default with instructions that fit your actual life.
Create a Simple Will with HeirLight
If you don’t have a will yet and your situation is relatively simple, putting basic instructions in place is often the single most important step you can take.
HeirLight helps you:
- Decide who should receive what
- Name an executor and guardians
- Cover your will, healthcare directive, and power of attorney in one guided experience
You start for $0, answer clear, human questions, and then print and sign your documents according to your state’s rules.
Important: HeirLight is not a law firm and does not provide legal, tax, or financial advice. Our tools are educational and self‑help in nature. For complex estates or specific legal questions, you should consult a licensed attorney.
If your current “plan” is just hoping things will work out, consider taking 20–30 minutes to put a simple will in place. It’s a small task now that can spare the people you love a lot of uncertainty later.
