Know how

Article categories

Grow your own

Whatever the scale of your ambitions or plot you'll find something useful here.

Make your own

Reduce your footprint by making your own, from knitting to soap-making to adorning your home.

Livestock and pets

Find out about rearing livestock from the farm to the garden, and doing the best for your pets.

Energy efficiency and construction

Discover how to adapt, change and even build your own home to enable you to tread more lightly upon the planet.

Cooking, preserving and home brewing

From the home brewery to ambitions of chefly grandeur. Find out how to do it all here and really taste the difference.

Wild food

Subsidise the larder in a sustainable way. From fishing, to shooting, to foraging safely, find it among these articles.

Conservation and the environment

Conserve our world for future generations. See how you can help in these pages.

Marketplace

From shopping with a conscience to building your own enterprise. Find advice and encouragement among these pages.

Everything else

Sometimes the diversity of downsizing can throw up an unusual topic.

Editorial

Past editorial items from the downsizer front page.

You are here: Home arrow Articles arrow Everything else arrow Dying without leaving a Will (intestate) - Who gets what?

Print

Dying without leaving a Will (intestate) - Who gets what?

Written by Mary-Jane

If you die without leaving a valid will then the law decides who gets what. Here is a rough guide to what would happen under the intestacy rules. This does not constitute legal advice, simply a general overview. If in doubt you should consult a solicitor.

All jointly held assets will automatically pass to the survivor - unless the jointly owned property (normally a house) is held as ‘Tenants in Common’ by the parties, rather than ‘Joint Tenants’. If held as ‘Tenants in Common’ it will be your share which would then fall within the rules of intestacy.

(If you decide to hold the property as tenants- in- common, then each owner has a distinct share in the property. If there are two owners this will automatically be half each, if three a third each, and so on, unless otherwise stated. The ‘otherwise stated’ is where the share amount is actually set out. For instance, 2 people who own a house as tenants-in-common can have their individual shares set at say, 80% and 20% respectively).

If you have a lawful spouse (i.e. you are legally married), but you have no children or other surviving blood relatives

Your spouse will get everything.

If you have a lawful spouse, plus children

If your estate is worth less than £125,000 then your spouse gets everything. If your estate is worth more than £125,000 then your spouse would get £125,000 and a life interest (i.e. the right to take interest on the remainder, but not the capital itself) in half of anything over this sum. Your children (when aged 18) would share half the sum over £125,000 and be entitled to the other half on the death of your spouse. Should any of your children die before you then their share(s) will be distributed amongst your remaining children, or if they leave children themselves, then their children would be entitled to take their parent’s share.

If you have a lawful spouse, no children, but do have surviving blood relatives

If your estate is worth less than £200,000 then your spouse gets everything, plus personal possessions. If your estate is worth more than £200,000 then your spouse would get £200,000 plus half the balance. The remaining half goes to the other relatives in this order of priority - parents; brothers/sisters or their children; half brothers/sisters or their children.

If you are not lawfully married, but have had children

Your estate will be shared between the children. Should they die before you then your remaining children take that share, or if they leave children themselves, their children would take their share.

If you are not lawfully married, have no children, but surviving relatives

Your estate will be shared equally amongst them in this order of priority - parents; brothers/sisters; half-blood brothers/sisters; grandparents; aunts/uncles; half-blood aunts/uncles. If any of these have predeceased you, but have living children then the children will take their parent's share.

If you are not lawfully married, and have no other relatives

Your estate will go the Crown, or to the Duchy of Lancaster, or the Duke of Cornwall.

It should be noted that these rules on intestacy do not recognise "common law" partners, and that "children" includes natural, adopted and illegitimate children, but excludes step-children. Civil Partnerships adopt the same rules on intestacy as married couples i.e. the surviving partner will inherit as if a spouse.