"If something happens to me, my spouse gets everything anyway, right?"
We hear this question constantly at WG Law -- and the answer surprises most people. In Texas, dying without a will (called dying "intestate") triggers a specific set of rules that determine who inherits your property. And the result is often not what you'd expect.
How Texas Intestacy Laws Work
When someone dies without a will in Texas, the Texas Estates Code dictates how property is distributed. The rules depend on two critical factors:
- Whether the property is community property or separate property
- Who your surviving family members are
Texas is a community property state, which means most assets acquired during marriage belong equally to both spouses. But separate property -- assets owned before marriage, or received as gifts or inheritances during marriage -- follows different rules.
Community Property: What Your Spouse Gets
If you die without a will and all your property is community property:
- If you have no children (or all children are also your spouse's children): Your spouse inherits all community property.
- If you have children from another relationship: Your spouse keeps their half of the community property. Your half passes to your children -- not to your spouse.
That second scenario is where things get complicated, especially for blended families. Your surviving spouse could end up co-owning the family home with your children from a prior relationship.
Separate Property: Even More Complicated
For separate property, the rules are different:
Personal property (cars, investments, cash):
- Spouse gets 1/3, children get 2/3
Real property (land, homes):
- Spouse gets a life estate in 1/3 (the right to use it during their lifetime), children get the rest
- When the spouse passes, that 1/3 also goes to the children
This means your spouse may not be able to sell the family home or access all of your investments without your children's cooperation.
Real-World Consequences
We've seen these scenarios play out in our practice:
- A surviving spouse who couldn't refinance the mortgage because the children (from the deceased spouse's prior marriage) now owned part of the home
- Adult children who demanded their share immediately, forcing the sale of the family home
- Family members who hadn't spoken in years suddenly becoming co-owners of valuable property
None of these outcomes were what the deceased person would have wanted. But without a will, the law decides -- not you.
The Simple Fix
The solution is straightforward: create an estate plan. A properly drafted will or trust lets you:
- Ensure your spouse inherits what you want them to have
- Provide for children from all relationships fairly
- Avoid forcing your family into co-ownership disputes
- Keep your family out of unnecessary court proceedings
Don't Leave It to the State
Texas intestacy laws were written as a one-size-fits-all default. They don't account for your specific family dynamics, your wishes, or your values. The only way to ensure your property goes where you want it to go is to put it in writing.
If you haven't created an estate plan yet -- or if your plan hasn't been updated in a few years -- contact WG Law to schedule a consultation. It's one of the most important things you can do for the people you love.