When a New Yorker dies without a valid will, the State of New York writes one for them. The default rules in EPTL Article 4 — the law of intestacy — substitute a rigid statutory formula for your judgment, distributing your property to your next of kin in fixed shares with no regard for the realities of your wealth, your business, or your family. For most people that is a regrettable inconvenience. For high-net-worth principals, business owners, and blended families, intestacy is a genuine threat: it can fracture ownership of a closely held company, hand assets to relatives you never intended to benefit, expose minor children’s inheritances to court supervision, and trigger litigation among heirs who each believe the statute favors them.
This page explains how dying without a will works in New York under current law, why the default outcome rarely matches a sophisticated estate plan, and how Morgan Legal Group and attorney Russel Morgan, Esq. build defensively drafted wills that take that power back. We serve clients statewide — across New York City, Long Island, Westchester, the Hudson Valley, and Upstate New York.
What “Intestacy” Actually Means in New York
A person who dies intestate has left no valid will governing the distribution of their probate property. When that happens, EPTL Article 4 controls. The statute identifies your surviving relatives in a strict order of priority — your “distributees” — and assigns each a mathematically defined share. There is no discretion. The court does not ask what you would have wanted, who depended on you, or which heir is best equipped to run the family business.
It is worth dispelling a common confusion at the outset: a living will is not a property will. A living will is a health-care and end-of-life directive expressing your wishes about medical treatment. It has nothing to do with who inherits your estate. A will that disposes of property takes effect only at death and must be admitted to probate in the Surrogate’s Court. If you want to understand the difference in depth, see our living will overview, then return here — the two documents solve entirely different problems.
How New York Distributes an Intestate Estate
Under EPTL Article 4, distribution depends on which relatives survive you. The following table summarizes the core default outcomes for a New York intestate estate.
| Who survives you | Who inherits the probate estate |
|---|---|
| Spouse and no children (descendants) | The entire estate passes to the surviving spouse |
| Spouse and children (descendants) | The spouse takes the first $50,000 plus one-half of the balance; the children share the remaining one-half |
| Children but no spouse | The children inherit the entire estate, divided equally |
| No spouse and no children | The estate passes to more distant kin in statutory order — parents, then siblings, then more remote relatives |
| No surviving distributees at all | The estate ultimately escheats to the State of New York |
Three points deserve emphasis for sophisticated families:
- “Children” means legal descendants. Stepchildren you helped raise but never adopted are not distributees. In a blended family, intestacy can completely disinherit the children you most wanted to protect.
- The spousal share is a floor, not a ceiling. Even where a will exists, a surviving spouse holds a right of election under EPTL 5-1.1-A to claim a minimum statutory share regardless of what the will says. Intestacy and the elective share together mean a spouse’s position is heavily protected by law — a critical planning fact when a prenuptial arrangement or second marriage is involved.
- Per stirpes distribution among descendants means a predeceased child’s share passes down to that child’s own children, which can scatter ownership of a single asset across an entire generation.
Why Intestacy Is Especially Dangerous for Complex Estates
For an ordinary estate, the statutory formula is merely impersonal. For a complex one, it is corrosive. Consider the situations our clients routinely face:
The business owner
Suppose you own a controlling interest in a closely held company. Intestacy divides that interest by statutory share — potentially splitting voting control among a spouse and several children who have never worked in the business and do not agree on its direction. There is no buy-sell mechanism, no succession plan, no protection for the operating partner. A defensively drafted will, coordinated with the company’s governing documents, keeps control where it belongs and provides liquidity to the other heirs instead of handing them shares.
The blended family
A second marriage with children from a prior relationship is the classic intestacy trap. The statutory spousal share can leave a surviving spouse holding the lion’s share of the estate while your own children from the first marriage wait — and waiting heirs litigate. A carefully structured will, often paired with trusts, balances the spouse’s needs against the children’s expectations in a way no statute can.
Minor or vulnerable beneficiaries
When a distributee is a minor, an intestate inheritance does not simply land in their pocket. It is administered under court supervision until the child reaches majority — at which point a large sum is delivered outright, with no protection from immaturity, creditors, or a future divorce. A will lets you hold those assets in trust, on terms you set.
High-net-worth estates and the tax exposure
Larger estates carry estate-tax exposure that thoughtful planning can mitigate. Intestacy does none of that planning — it distributes assets in a way that may waste exemptions and force the sale of illiquid holdings to pay tax. A drafted plan can stage gifts, fund trusts, and preserve assets that the statute would simply liquidate by default.
The Cure: A Valid New York Will
The remedy for intestacy is straightforward in concept and exacting in execution. New York will formalities are governed by EPTL §3-2.1, and a will that misses a single requirement can be denied probate — sending the estate right back into intestacy. The core requirements are:
- At least two attesting witnesses. Two witnesses must observe the execution and sign the will.
- One 30-day window. Both witnesses must sign within a single 30-day period. New York applies a rebuttable presumption that this 30-day requirement was satisfied.
- Signature at the end. The testator must sign at the end of the will — or another person may sign in the testator’s presence and at their direction.
- Publication. The testator must declare to the witnesses that the instrument is their will.
- Signing or acknowledgment in the witnesses’ presence. The testator either signs in the presence of each witness or acknowledges the signature to each witness, and the witnesses sign at the testator’s request, adding their residence addresses.
These are not technicalities to be improvised. We walk through them in detail on our NY will requirements and will execution pages, and we begin every engagement with our will drafting overview. When circumstances change, a codicil or amendment — executed with the same formalities — keeps the plan current without rewriting everything.
The defensive-drafting principle: A will is only as good as its weakest formality and its least anticipated contingency. We draft for the contests that never happen — predeceased beneficiaries, a missing asset, a challenge to capacity — so that the document survives the moment it is needed most.
Frequently Asked Questions
What happens if I die without a will in New York?
Your estate is distributed under EPTL Article 4, the intestacy statute. The State applies a fixed formula based on which relatives survive you — typically your spouse and descendants — with no regard for your actual wishes, your business succession needs, or non-relatives you wanted to provide for. The estate must still pass through the Surrogate’s Court.
Does my spouse automatically inherit everything if I have no will?
Not necessarily. If you leave a spouse and no descendants, the spouse takes the entire estate. But if you also leave children, the spouse receives the first $50,000 plus one-half of the balance, and your children share the rest. Separately, a surviving spouse has a right of election under EPTL 5-1.1-A to a minimum share even when a will exists.
Can a will I sign at home avoid intestacy?
Only if it meets every requirement of EPTL §3-2.1 — including at least two attesting witnesses who sign within one 30-day period, your signature at the end, and publication to the witnesses. A homemade will that fails any formality can be denied probate, which sends the estate back into intestacy. This is precisely why execution should be supervised.
Is a living will the same as a property will?
No. A living will is a health-care directive about end-of-life medical treatment. It does not distribute any property. A property will takes effect at death and is admitted to probate in the Surrogate’s Court. They are separate documents that solve separate problems.
I own a business and have a blended family — is intestacy really that risky for me?
Yes. Intestacy can split voting control of a closely held company among heirs with no succession plan, and it can disinherit stepchildren entirely while over-allocating to a surviving spouse. These are exactly the scenarios where defensive drafting matters most, and where a default statute does the most damage.
Take Intestacy Off the Table
If you have no will — or one that no longer reflects your wealth, your business, or your family — New York’s default rules are waiting to decide your legacy for you. Russel Morgan, Esq. and the team at Morgan Legal Group build wills engineered to withstand challenge and to keep your intentions, not a statute, in control. We work with clients throughout New York State.
Schedule a 30-minute consultation with Russel Morgan, Esq.
Continue reading: Will Drafting Overview · NY Will Requirements · Will Execution · Codicils & Amendments · Living Will
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