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When a New Yorker dies without a valid will, the state writes one for them. Under the New York Estates, Powers and Trusts Law (EPTL) Article 4, a rigid statutory formula — not your wishes, your relationships, or your sense of fairness — decides who inherits everything you owned. This is called dying intestate, and it is the single most common, and most avoidable, estate-planning failure we see across New York: from Manhattan and Brooklyn to Nassau and Suffolk on Long Island, up through Westchester and the Hudson Valley, and across Upstate.

At Morgan Legal Group, attorney Russel Morgan, Esq. and our team treat the will as just one document in a coordinated set of instruments designed to keep your estate out of the intestacy default. This page explains exactly how New York distributes an intestate estate, why the result so rarely matches what families actually want, and the full range of documents we prepare to put you — not EPTL Article 4 — in control.

What “Intestate” Actually Means in New York

You die intestate if you leave no valid will at all, or if the will you signed fails to meet New York’s strict execution requirements and cannot be admitted to probate. In either case, EPTL Article 4 governs distribution of your next of kin — your closest surviving blood relatives and your spouse, in a fixed order of priority.

Three points surprise most people:

A will takes effect only at death and must be admitted to probate in the Surrogate’s Court. Without that document, your family enters the parallel — and frequently more contentious — process of administration.

How EPTL Article 4 Divides an Intestate Estate (2026)

The table below summarizes the New York intestate distribution scheme. “Estate” here means the net intestate estate — the assets that pass by your will or by intestacy, as opposed to assets that pass automatically by beneficiary designation or joint ownership.

Who survives you Who inherits under EPTL Article 4
Spouse, no children (no “issue”) Spouse takes the entire estate
Spouse and children Spouse takes the first $50,000 plus one-half of the balance; children share the remaining one-half
Children, no spouse Children take everything, in equal shares (by representation)
No spouse, no children — parents survive Parents inherit
No spouse, children, or parents Siblings (and their issue) inherit
No spouse, children, parents, or siblings More remote next of kin — grandparents, aunts, uncles, cousins — in statutory order
No surviving relatives at all The estate escheats to the State of New York

A few critical refinements:

The Right of Election: A Floor the Will Cannot Override

Even when you do have a will, New York protects a surviving spouse with the spousal right of election under EPTL 5-1.1-A. A surviving spouse may claim a statutory minimum share of the estate — generally the greater of $50,000 or one-third of the net estate — regardless of what the will says.

This matters in two directions:

  1. If you try to disinherit a spouse entirely through a will, the right of election can override that choice.
  2. The right of election is a reminder that estate planning is not a single document but a system. Coordinating a will with trusts, lifetime gifts, and beneficiary designations is how we plan around the spousal floor lawfully and deliberately — rather than discovering it after death.

Why a Will Alone Is Not the Whole Answer — and Where Our Services Come In

Avoiding intestacy is the floor, not the ceiling. The reason families come to Morgan Legal Group is that a single will, even a perfectly executed one, leaves gaps: incapacity during life, assets that bypass probate, health-care decisions, and the speed and privacy of transfer at death. We prepare a coordinated suite of documents so that no part of your plan defaults to the state.

Here is the breadth of what our drafting practice covers, and how each piece keeps you out of an intestacy or guardianship default:

The throughline is simple: every document we prepare exists to replace a state-imposed default with your decision.

How New York’s Will Execution Rules Prevent “Accidental Intestacy”

Many estates end up intestate not because there was no will, but because the will failed. New York’s execution standard under EPTL §3-2.1 is exacting, and a will that misses a step can be denied probate — sending the estate straight into Article 4. We draft and supervise execution to meet every requirement:

Skipping or fumbling any of these can be fatal to the document. Supervised execution is one of the most valuable — and most overlooked — services we provide, precisely because it is what stands between a signed paper and an enforceable will.

A Practical Comparison: Will-Based Plan vs. No Will

Issue With a properly drafted plan Intestate (no valid will)
Who inherits The people you name Whoever EPTL Article 4 dictates
Who manages the estate The executor you nominate A court-appointed administrator
Unmarried partner / stepchild Can inherit if you provide for them Receives nothing
Privacy & speed Trusts can avoid probate Full Surrogate’s Court administration
Minor children’s guardian You nominate a guardian The court decides
Charitable gifts Honored as written Not possible

Frequently Asked Questions

What happens to my estate in New York if I die without a will?

Your estate passes under EPTL Article 4 to your next of kin in a fixed statutory order — typically your spouse and children first, then parents, then siblings, and outward to more remote relatives. If no relatives survive, the estate escheats to the State of New York. You lose all say over who inherits and who administers the estate.

Does my spouse automatically get everything if I have no will?

Not necessarily. If you leave a spouse and no children, the spouse inherits the entire estate. But if you leave a spouse and children, the spouse takes the first $50,000 plus one-half of the balance under Article 4, and your children share the rest. A spouse may also be disqualified for abandonment or non-support.

Can my unmarried partner or stepchildren inherit under New York intestacy?

No. Intestacy distributes only to legally recognized relatives. An unmarried partner, a stepchild you never legally adopted, friends, and charities receive nothing under EPTL Article 4. The only way to provide for them is through a valid will or other estate-planning documents.

Is a “living will” the same as the will that controls my property?

No — they are entirely separate documents. A living will is a health-care and end-of-life directive that speaks for your medical wishes while you are alive. A last will and testament controls your property after death and must be admitted to probate. We draft both; see our living will page.

Can a will still leave my spouse with nothing in New York?

Generally no. Under the spousal right of election (EPTL 5-1.1-A), a surviving spouse may claim a minimum statutory share — typically the greater of $50,000 or one-third of the net estate — regardless of what the will says. Sound planning accounts for this floor deliberately rather than colliding with it.

Take Control Before the State Does

Intestacy is not a plan — it is the absence of one, and New York fills that void with a formula that rarely matches what families actually want. The solution is a coordinated set of documents, properly drafted and properly executed.

Morgan Legal Group and attorney Russel Morgan, Esq. prepare wills, codicils, trusts, powers of attorney, health-care directives, and living wills for clients across New York State. Review our will drafting overview, learn the New York will requirements, or revisit how we handle intestacy planning.

Schedule your consultation with Russel Morgan, Esq. and replace the state’s default with your own decisions.

This page is general legal information about New York law, not legal advice. For guidance on your specific situation, consult a qualified New York estate-planning attorney.

Further reading from Morgan Legal Group: the last will and testament in New York.