Dying without a will in Washington triggers a legal process called intestate succession, where state law – not your wishes – determines who inherits your home and other assets. For married homeowners especially, the outcome often surprises surviving family members who assumed everything would transfer automatically.
This guide focuses specifically on Washington homeowners who want to understand what intestate succession means for real property, and what steps can protect a family home from unintended outcomes.
Intestate Succession Definition: Intestate succession is the legal process Washington uses to distribute a deceased person’s assets when no valid will exists, following a fixed priority order established by state statute rather than personal preference.
Why Your Spouse Might Not Inherit Everything
Most people assume a surviving spouse automatically gets the house. In Washington, that’s only partially true – and the details matter. Washington is a community property state, which means property acquired during the marriage is jointly owned by both spouses by default.
Here’s the thing: if the home was purchased during the marriage, your spouse owns half already. The other half – your share – goes through intestate succession. If you have children only from this marriage, your spouse does inherit your half. But if you have children from a prior relationship, your half could be split between your spouse and those children under Washington’s intestate succession statutes (RCW 11.04).
That means your surviving spouse could end up owning the home jointly with your children from another relationship. That is not usually what anyone intends.
Washington Intestate Succession vs. Oregon and Idaho
| State | Community Property? | Spouse Inherits All (No Children)? | Blended Family Risk | Probate Required? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Washington | Yes | Yes | High – children from prior relationships split decedent’s share | Often yes |
| Oregon | No | Yes (surviving spouse receives all) | Moderate – spousal share is protected | Often yes |
| Idaho | Yes | Yes | Varies based on individual family circumstances | Often yes |
Washington’s community property rules create unique exposure for blended families that Oregon’s system handles differently. If you’ve moved here from Oregon or Idaho, your assumptions about inheritance may not carry over.
Thinking about this for your situation? Let’s talk. Contact us and we’ll walk you through your options – no pressure.
Separate Property vs. Community Property: The Split That Catches Families Off Guard
Community property: Assets acquired during the marriage, including most home purchases made after the wedding date.
Separate property: Assets owned before marriage, or received as a gift or inheritance, even during the marriage. A home inherited from a parent, for example, may be entirely your separate property.
Separate property follows different intestate rules. Without a will, your separate property passes first to your children, then to parents, then to siblings – with the spouse potentially receiving only a fraction. Probate proceedings for intestate estates can create significant delays for families who need clarity on housing.
The most common mistake families make is assuming a deed tells the whole story. How title is held matters, but it doesn’t override intestate succession rules when a co-owner dies without a plan.
Intestate Succession vs. a Valid Will: Side-by-Side
Where intestate succession succeeds: It provides a legal framework so assets don’t become permanently stuck, courts follow a predictable process, and creditors have a structured path to claims.
Where intestate succession fails: It ignores your actual wishes, can create joint ownership between your spouse and children from prior relationships, triggers probate costs and delays, and cannot account for blended families, unmarried partners, or estranged relatives.
Where a valid will succeeds: You control who gets the home, you can protect an unmarried partner, you can keep step-children in the picture, and you can specify conditions like allowing a surviving spouse to remain in the home for life.
Where a will alone sometimes fails: A will still goes through probate in Washington. For faster transfer of a home, a revocable living trust or a beneficiary deed may be more efficient.
The verdict: A will is always better than no plan, but Washington homeowners with blended families, unmarried partners, or significant separate property should consider trust-based planning for full control and probate avoidance.
See how different planning approaches compare – explore our services page for an overview of estate planning options.
Your Washington Estate Planning Action Plan
- Step 1 – Identify property classification: Determine whether your home is community property or separate property. Check your deed and the date of purchase relative to your marriage date.
- Step 2 – Map your family structure: List all potential heirs including children from prior relationships, step-children, and any unmarried partner. This reveals where intestate succession creates unintended outcomes.
- Step 3 – Choose the right planning document: A basic will handles simple estates. A revocable living trust avoids probate. A community property agreement can simplify transfer between spouses. A qualified attorney can help you choose.
- Step 4 – Execute documents properly: Washington has specific legal requirements for valid will execution. Errors in execution can invalidate the entire document, so working with a qualified attorney helps ensure your documents are properly prepared and signed.
- Step 5 – Review title and beneficiary designations: Some assets pass outside your will entirely. Confirm how your home’s title is held and update any transfer-on-death deeds or beneficiary designations to match your plan.
Documents to Gather Before Your Estate Planning Consultation
- ☐ Current deed to your home showing how title is held
- ☐ Marriage certificate and any prior divorce decrees
- ☐ List of children and their birth dates (including step-children)
- ☐ Any existing wills, trusts, or estate planning documents
- ☐ Life insurance policies with current beneficiary designations
- ☐ Mortgage statements and lender information
Key Takeaways for Washington Homeowners in 2026
- Community property rules matter – your spouse may not automatically inherit your full share of the home without a will.
- Blended families face the highest risk – children from prior relationships can inherit alongside a surviving spouse under Washington intestate law.
- Separate property follows different rules – a home you owned before marriage may pass primarily to your children, not your spouse.
- Probate takes time – intestate estates in Washington can take many months to resolve through the courts.
- A will is just the start – trusts and title strategies can provide faster, more controlled transfers than a will alone in 2026 and beyond.
Frequently Asked Questions
What does dying without a will mean in Washington State?
Dying without a will in Washington means your assets, including your home, are distributed according to the state’s intestate succession laws rather than your personal wishes. A court oversees the process, appoints an administrator, and follows a fixed priority order – spouse, children, parents, siblings – to determine who receives what.
Does a surviving spouse automatically get the house in Washington?
Not always – it depends on whether the home is community or separate property and whether there are children from prior relationships. If the home is community property with no children from other relationships, the spouse typically inherits the decedent’s share. Blended families can face a very different outcome under current Washington law (2026).
How long does intestate probate take in Washington?
Intestate probate in Washington can take many months depending on estate complexity, creditor claims, and court scheduling. Contested estates or those with real property disputes can take longer. Planning ahead with a will or trust can significantly reduce this timeline for your family.
Can an unmarried partner inherit my home without a will?
No – unmarried partners have no inheritance rights under Washington intestate succession law. Without a will or other planning document naming them, an unmarried partner receives nothing from your estate regardless of how long you lived together or how much they contributed to the household.
What is a revocable living trust and does it avoid probate in Washington?
A revocable living trust is a legal document that holds your assets during your lifetime and transfers them to beneficiaries after death without going through probate. In Washington, property held in a properly funded trust transfers directly to named beneficiaries, bypassing the court process entirely and saving families months of delays.
How much does estate planning typically cost in Washington?
Basic wills in Washington generally range from $300 to $1,000, while complete trust-based plans typically range from $1,500 to $4,000 depending on complexity – these are general industry ranges, not the fees of any specific firm. Compared to the cost of probate, which can consume 3 to 5 percent of an estate’s value, upfront planning is almost always the more affordable path.
Your Next Step as a Washington Homeowner
Intestate succession is not a worst-case scenario that only happens to other people. In Washington, it happens to families who simply ran out of time to make a plan. As of 2026, the state’s laws remain unchanged – your spouse, your blended family, and your unmarried partner are all exposed if you haven’t acted.
The Terry Law Firm, P.S. serves clients in Sumner, WA and surrounding communities throughout Pierce County – including Puyallup, Bonney Lake, Auburn, and Tacoma – helping families understand their real options before a crisis forces the issue.
Ready to take the next step? Contact us today for straight answers and real solutions. A conversation now can protect your home, your spouse, and the people you care about most.
This blog post is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws change, and individual circumstances vary. Consult a licensed Washington attorney for guidance specific to your situation.
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