Texas Intestacy Laws (2026): Why Your Will Matters More Than You Think

Most people don’t think about what happens if they die without a will. But here’s the thing, if you pass away in Texas without one, the state steps in and makes major decisions about who gets your stuff. And honestly? The way the state divides it up might surprise you.

Here’s what you need to know: Texas intestacy laws are strict. They follow a rigid formula. No flexibility. No room for what you actually wanted. In this guide, we’ll break down exactly how these laws work, who inherits what, and why having a will actually matters.

What Is Intestacy, Anyway?

What Is Intestacy, Anyway?

Sound complicated? It’s actually pretty straightforward. When you die “intestate,” it just means you died without a valid will. No plan. No instructions. So Texas law steps in with its own roadmap for dividing up your estate.

Here’s the key thing: intestacy laws only affect what’s called “probate assets.” Think of it like this. Some of your stuff automatically goes to people you named (like beneficiaries on life insurance). That stuff bypasses intestacy rules entirely. But other assets—your house, your bank accounts, your car—those go through probate. And that’s where intestacy kicks in.

Community Property vs. Separate Property—This Changes Everything

Okay, this part’s important. Texas is a “community property” state. That means the law treats property differently depending on when and how you got it. This matters a lot when you die without a will.

Community property is anything you and your spouse earned or bought during your marriage. It doesn’t matter whose name is on it. Both of you own half. Separate property is stuff you owned before marriage, inherited, or received as a gift. Only you own that.

Why does this distinction matter? Because the inheritance rules are totally different for each type. Stick with me here.

When You Have a Surviving Spouse and Kids

When You Have a Surviving Spouse and Kids

Let’s say you die and you’re married with kids. Here’s what happens to your community property: If all your kids are also your spouse’s biological or adopted kids, your spouse gets it all. All of it. Your surviving spouse inherits the entire community property. Pretty straightforward, right?

But—and this is a big but—if you have kids from a previous relationship, things change. Your spouse gets half the community property. Your kids (from any relationship) share the other half.

Now for your separate property (stuff that’s just yours). Your spouse gets one-third of your personal property. Your kids get two-thirds. For your real estate and land? Your spouse gets a life estate in one-third of it. That means your spouse can use it their whole life, but after they pass away, it goes to your kids.

Wait, it gets better. If you have no kids at all, your spouse might inherit your entire estate. But that only happens if you also have no living parents and no siblings. If you have parents or siblings? They inherit some of your separate property too.

When You Have No Spouse

Single and no kids? Here’s the roadmap. Your estate goes to your parents in equal shares. If only one parent is alive? They get half, and your siblings split the other half. If neither parent is around but you have siblings? Everything goes to your siblings.

Still have no siblings? Then your grandparents inherit. Keep going down the family tree. The law keeps searching for relatives until it finds someone. It’s pretty rare for the state to actually keep your money. But it happens if you have literally no living relatives at all.

What About Half-Siblings and Adopted Kids?

What About Half-Siblings and Adopted Kids?

Here’s something that confuses people. Half-siblings absolutely can inherit. But here’s the catch: if you have both full siblings and half-siblings, the half-siblings get half what the full siblings get. So if you have one full brother and one half-sister, your brother gets two shares and your half-sister gets one share.

But if you only have half-siblings and no full siblings? Then they all inherit equally. The “half” reduction only applies when both types exist.

Adopted children? They inherit just like biological kids. No difference. The law treats them the same. But here’s what people get wrong: stepchildren get nothing unless you legally adopted them. Sorry, but that’s how Texas law works. And foster children? Same thing—unless they were legally adopted, they don’t inherit.

The 120-Hour Survivorship Rule

Okay, pause. This one’s really important. To inherit anything in Texas, you have to outlive the person by 120 hours. That’s five days.

Why? Imagine you and your sibling are in a car accident. You die immediately. Your sibling dies three days later. Under this rule, your sibling didn’t survive long enough. So their estate doesn’t inherit from you. Your property goes to the next person in line instead.

This rule prevents a weird situation where property bounces between estates really quickly. It’s actually pretty smart. But it catches people off guard sometimes.

Penalties and Consequences of Dying Without a Will

Let’s be real. Dying intestate doesn’t result in fines or jail time. You’re already dead. But your family? They face serious consequences.

Time and Money: The probate process becomes expensive and time-consuming. Without a will, the court gets more involved. Lawyers charge more. Court fees add up. A simple estate that would cost $2,000 to handle with a will might cost $5,000 or more without one.

Family Conflict: Believe it or not, this happens constantly. Without clear instructions, family members argue. Cousins dispute who gets what. The law has rules, sure, but some family members don’t accept those rules. That breeds resentment and fights. Some families never recover.

Assets You Didn’t Intend: The law distributes property based on blood relation, not on who you were close to. Maybe you wanted your best friend to have something. Too bad. The law doesn’t care. Your best friend gets nothing. Your distant cousin you haven’t seen in thirty years gets a share.

Blended Families Get Hit Hard: If you remarry, the consequences are especially rough. Your new spouse might inherit way less than you’d want. Your kids from your first marriage might get more than your new spouse. This creates legitimate financial hardship for people you loved.

Special Situations: Adopted Children, Posthumous Kids, and More

Adopted children inherit just like biological children. Full stop. No questions asked.

Posthumous children (kids born after you die but conceived before) can inherit. But they have to survive for at least 120 hours after birth. So if a child is born and dies within five days, they can’t inherit. If they survive longer than 120 hours, they’re treated like any other child.

Children placed for adoption get interesting treatment. If you gave up a child for adoption, that child can usually still inherit from your estate. Even though they’re legally the child of someone else now. The law recognizes the biological connection.

Foster children and stepchildren don’t inherit unless legally adopted. I know this sounds harsh, but that’s the rule. Raising a kid for years doesn’t create legal inheritance rights. Only legal adoption does.

What About Non-Probate Assets?

Remember how I said some assets bypass intestacy rules? Let me explain which ones those are.

Life insurance goes straight to whoever you named as beneficiary. Not your will. The beneficiary designation.

Retirement accounts (401(k)s, IRAs, etc.) go to the named beneficiary. Same deal.

Bank accounts with “payable-on-death” designations go directly to whoever you named.

Homes with “transfer-on-death” deeds transfer automatically to the person you named.

Joint accounts with survivorship rights go to the surviving joint owner.

Here’s the tricky part: if your named beneficiary dies before you and you never updated it? The money might fall back into your probate estate. Then intestacy rules apply. This is surprisingly common. People name their spouse as beneficiary, then forget to update after divorce. Big mistake.

How the Probate Process Actually Works

When you die intestate in Texas, someone has to start the probate process. Usually a family member files paperwork with the court. The court appoints an administrator to manage your estate. That person has to find all your assets, pay your debts, and distribute what’s left according to intestacy law.

The whole thing takes months. Sometimes it takes over a year. For a simple estate, it’s annoying. For a complex one, it’s a nightmare.

Small estates get a break, though. If your total probate assets are under $75,000, your heirs can skip the formal probate process. They just file a “small estate affidavit” instead. It’s faster and cheaper. But you still have to go through this process without a will.

What’s the Difference Between Community and Separate Property Again?

Honestly, this confuses a lot of people. So let me break it down with an example.

You got married at 25. At that point, you had a house you’d bought on your own. That house is separate property. You bought a car together during your marriage using both your incomes. That car is community property.

When you die, your spouse gets half the car automatically. That’s their half of the community property. Your share of the car goes into your estate. And your spouse only gets a portion of it—usually one-third of your personal property if you have kids.

But your house? That’s all separate property. Your spouse doesn’t automatically get half. Your spouse gets one-third of it if you have kids, or the whole thing if you have no kids and no living parents or siblings.

Makes sense? The rule basically is: stuff earned during marriage gets split between spouses. Stuff you brought in or earned before marriage stays yours to decide about. But without a will, the law divides it in ways you might not like.

Intestacy Laws If You’re Not Married and Have No Kids

This situation’s actually simpler. No spouse. No kids. Where does it go?

First, it goes to your parents. If both are alive, they split it equally. If one parent is alive, they get half. Your siblings split the other half. If one parent is alive but you have no siblings? Your parent gets it all.

If both parents are gone but you have siblings? Everything goes to your siblings in equal shares. If you have no siblings? It goes to your grandparents. Then great-grandparents. Then aunts and uncles. Then cousins.

It’s basically concentric circles expanding outward from you. The law keeps looking for relatives. And frankly, the law works pretty hard to find someone. It’s extremely rare for your estate to go to the state (called “escheat” in legal terms). But if you truly have no living relatives, that’s what happens. The state gets the money.

How to Create a Valid Will in Texas

Okay, so obviously you should have a will. Here’s what makes a will legal in Texas.

You must be 18 or older. Pretty obvious.

Your will must be in writing. Handwritten is fine. Typed is better. But it has to be words on paper.

You must sign it. This is critical. Unsigned drafts don’t count. At all. The court completely ignores them. I’ve seen families fight over unsigned documents their parent clearly meant as a will. Doesn’t matter. No signature? No will.

Two witnesses must sign it. They can’t be beneficiaries. They can’t be related to you. They should watch you sign and then sign themselves. Some people get fancy with notarization, which is great for extra protection.

You need to be of “sound mind.” This basically means you understand what you’re doing.

Your will needs to show clear intent. It should be obvious you’re writing your will and not just a random letter.

That’s it. That’s all you need. A valid Texas will doesn’t have to be complicated. It doesn’t have to be fancy. But it absolutely has to be signed and witnessed properly. Seriously, don’t skip this step.

Blended Families: Where Texas Intestacy Gets Messy

Here’s where intestacy laws create real problems. Let’s say you get remarried after your first marriage ends. You have kids from your first marriage and a new spouse. You die.

Your second spouse might inherit part of your community property with your new spouse. But your kids from your first marriage also inherit. Your new spouse doesn’t automatically get everything. That’s not how it works. Your ex-spouse’s kids aren’t treated any differently than your current spouse by the law.

And stepchildren? They inherit nothing. Ever. Unless you legally adopted them. A stepchild could have lived with you for twenty years. Wouldn’t matter. They inherit nothing.

This creates financial strain. Your new spouse might not have enough money to live on. Your kids might feel short-changed. Everyone’s frustrated. A will could fix this instantly. You could say exactly what you want: “Everything to my current spouse” or “This house to my kids and money to my spouse” or whatever you prefer. Without a will? The law decides.

FAQ: Questions You Probably Have

What if I die with no will and no relatives at all? The State of Texas gets your estate. Your money goes into the state treasury. This is called “escheat.” It’s rare, but it happens.

Can someone contest my property distribution if I die without a will? No. Intestacy law is intestacy law. It’s not up for debate. But family members can argue about who qualifies as an heir. Did that child get legally adopted? Is that person actually a sibling? Those disputes happen in court.

Does having a will cost a lot of money? Not really. A simple will costs $100 to $500. Compare that to $2,000+ in probate costs when you have no will. The will pays for itself instantly.

What happens if I have kids from multiple relationships? All your kids are treated equally under Texas law. No kid gets priority over another. They all share equally unless you have a will saying otherwise.

Can I change my will later? Absolutely. You can create a new will anytime. You can also update it with an amendment called a “codicil.” Just make sure any changes follow the same signing and witnessing rules as your original will.

What if I have substantial assets but no will? It’s even more important to have a will. Large estates create bigger probate costs and more family conflict. The law’s formula might not distribute things the way you want.

Do I need a lawyer to make a will? Not technically. You can write a simple will yourself. But a lawyer charges $200-$500 for a basic will and catches mistakes. DIY wills sometimes miss something that causes problems later.

Final Thoughts

Here’s the bottom line: Texas intestacy laws are strict, inflexible, and unlikely to match what you actually want. They follow a rigid formula. No exceptions. No adjustments for special circumstances.

If you die without a will, the state decides what happens. Your best friend gets nothing. Your new spouse might get less than you’d hoped. Your distant cousin you’ve never met inherits. Your kids from a previous relationship get a share of community property you might want to keep in the family.

A will takes an hour to write and a couple hundred dollars to do right. It saves your family thousands in probate costs and eliminates family conflict. It honors your actual wishes instead of what the state guesses you’d want.

Talk to a lawyer or use a reputable online service. Get something in place. Your family will thank you. Seriously, this is one of those rare things you can do that actually protects the people you love after you’re gone.

Now you know the basics. Stay informed. Think about what you want to happen to your stuff. And when you’re ready, get a will done. Your family deserves that much.

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