Estate Planning and Blended Families

Blended families are formed when two people live together with children from previous relationships. They are increasingly common in the UK, and can work extremely well. However it is worth considering the estate planning implications.

It is possible to accidentally leave family members without any inheritance due to a lack of planning or appropriate legal advice.

If a will was written with a previous partner clearly this will need to be revisited. Some wills can be voided on re-marriage.

Where no will is written at all, intestacy laws kick in. This means the estate will typically be inherited by the surviving spouse, and the children left with nothing at all. There is often concern that the spouse may not then pass that inheritance on to the deceased’s children from his or her previous relationship, and instead leave the whole estate to their own children. This can happen intentionally or accidentally if the correct legal advice is not obtained.

Intestacy law was not written with blended families in mind. As a result it is too easy for the wrong thing to happen, and this can occur purely by accident.

In all cases, we strongly recommend that parents of blended families seek professional advice and engage in open dialogue to ensure that nobody is surprised by what happens to an estate on death. This can involve difficult conversations, but it is better to deal with this now than in a more vulnerable moment after a bereavement.

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The guidance and/or advice contained within this website is subject to the UK regulatory regime and is therefore primarily targeted at consumers based in the UK. Welby is a trading name of Welby Associates Wealth Management Ltd Company Registered Number NI630504 who is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority, FCA register number 697372. The Financial Ombudsman Service is available to sort out individual complaints that clients and financial services businesses aren't able to resolve themselves. To contact the Financial Ombudsman Service please visit www.financial-ombudsman.org.uk

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