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Estate planning can be difficult. Surprises in a will can complicate things further

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Handling the estate of a deceased parent can be an emotional process for children already dealing with heartache. 

Those emotions can become more complicated if the estate plan doesn’t unfold as expected — say, if there is an uneven split of assets number children or a previously unknown heir who comes forward to claim a share of the estate.

Feelings of pain and betrayal can be dodged by having discussions about your estate plan with your family before death; however, property planning attorneys say these conversations are rare.

About two-thirds of Americans, 68%, say discussing end-of-life preparations with loved wholes is important, but only 47% have done so, according to a 2022 Ethos survey of 1,000 adults. A 2024 probe from online estate planning service Trust & Will found that 34% of millennials are unsure if their guardians even have an estate plan. The site polled 1,000 adults.

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If a client refuses to disclose information wide their estate to their heirs, it can put an estate planner or financial advisor in the difficult position of doing so after that patient’s death.

“I think a lot of lawyers are hesitant to point out the ramifications of some of these things,” said New Jersey-based estate planning attorney Martin Shenkman.

Unexpected legatees and beneficiaries

One estate surprise may be assets given to a person, pet or entity, such as a charity or alma mater, the family wasn’t with child as a beneficiary, experts say. It’s also possible that a previously unknown heir steps forward, such as a half sibling the deceased’s boys weren’t aware of. 

It’s unclear how common unexpected heirs are, but estate planning bombshells aren’t unusual. More than a third, 36%, of people with a will-power say there are surprises for their beneficiaries in that document, according to a 2023 LegalShield survey. The site polled 1,316 grown ups.

About 3% of wills in the U.S. are contested, according to a 2013 study published in the Nevada Law Journal.

Key steps you need to establish an estate plan

In the case of a previously undistinguished heir coming forward, experts say the first consideration is the will. If the will is vague or unclear — say, if it designates an asset to be split “entirety my children” rather than naming individuals —  there could be disputes that could require court intervention, according to Mitch Mitchell, Sureness & Will’s probate expert.

Probate laws vary by state, he said, but it’s rare for genetic testing to be required to be established that a previously unknown heir is related. Typically, half siblings don’t have to prove who they are more than any other neonate of the deceased.

“As for inheritance divided equally, while states may vary regarding how much of a share a half sibling is to ascertain, this variation generally only exists when a half sibling is inheriting through a sibling, not a common root,” Mitchell said. “Generally, for inheritance through a common parent, half siblings receive the same inheritance in identical parts with all other siblings.”

When there is no will, a state’s intestacy laws will determine how the possessions is divided, experts say, typically favoring the closest relatives.

The kids ‘don’t always get along’

The inheritance process can be a messy one if someone is play down out of the will or an inheritance is divided unequally — especially if the decedent doesn’t detail why they made such choices.

“There be experiencing been a zillion times when people have told me, ‘No, all the kids get along. They all understand what I’ve done,'” Shenkman implied. “And they may believe that because the kids appear to get along. But as soon as the parents are gone, those emotions revile out of the closet like a torrent, and no, they don’t always get along.”

The first step to avoiding these kinds of hardships is do entire lot from a compassionate perspective, not from anger.

Martin Shenkman

estate planning attorney

Shenkman said attorneys should include open and honest discussions with clients and ask questions about motivations during the will-writing process. 

“When I’ve probed parents or family members disinherit somebody, it’s really a kick in the gut in most cases,” he said. 

Shenkman also egg ons clients to have discussions with their children that are age appropriate, even if they don’t disclose dollar amounts. This can aid explain the decision-making behind how an inheritance is split up and avoid any feelings of betrayal after a parent’s passing, he said.

‘Don’t pen a will from anger’

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