Dying without a will in Utah means state intestacy laws automatically determine who inherits your assets, who raises your children, and who manages your estate. Utah’s intestate succession statutes follow a rigid formula that ignores your personal relationships, your wishes, and your family’s actual needs.
This guide focuses specifically on Utah residents who have not yet created a will or trust and want to understand exactly what happens to their estate if they die without one.
Intestate Succession Definition: Intestate succession is the legal process by which Utah courts distribute a deceased person’s assets when no valid will exists, following a fixed statutory order of inheritance defined under Utah Code Title 75.
Over 34 years of working with families in estate planning, one pattern repeats constantly: people assume their family will simply figure it out. They won’t. What they’ll inherit instead is a lengthy, expensive probate process with no say over the outcome. At Terry Law Firm, PLLC., we’ve seen this situation create real hardship for families in St. George, Utah and across Washington County.
What Utah’s Intestacy Laws Actually Decide
Utah follows the Uniform Probate Code, which means state law draws a strict family tree and distributes assets accordingly. Here’s how that plays out in real life.
Intestate heir: A person legally entitled to inherit under state law when no will exists – regardless of your actual relationship or intentions.
If you’re married with children from that marriage, your spouse typically receives everything. But if you have children from a prior relationship, the split changes – your spouse may receive only a portion, and your children from the other relationship receive the rest. According to the Utah Uniform Probate Code, the exact percentages depend on who survives you and their relationship to your spouse.
Some other outcomes that catch families off guard:
- An unmarried long-term partner receives nothing – zero, regardless of how long you lived together
- Stepchildren are not automatically included unless legally adopted
- If no relatives can be found, your estate escheats (passes) to the state of Utah entirely
- A guardian for your minor children is chosen by a judge, not by you
Recent data shows that roughly 60% of American adults have no estate planning documents in place. That number is even higher among adults under 45, and the assumption that estates are “too small” to matter is one of the most common and costly mistakes we see.
Will vs. Trust in Utah: Which Approach Works?
| Feature | Will Only | Revocable Living Trust |
|---|---|---|
| Avoids Probate | No | Yes |
| Controls Asset Distribution | Yes | Yes |
| Appoints Guardian for Minor Children | Yes | Will needed alongside |
| Typical Cost (Utah, 2025) | $1,000 – $2,500 | $3,500 – $5,000 |
| Probate Timeline | 6-18 months | None required |
| Best For | Simpler estates, naming guardians | Avoiding court, privacy, larger estates |
Where a will succeeds: Names guardians for minor children, directs specific bequests, simple to create, establishes your intentions clearly.
Where a will fails: It does not avoid probate. A will essentially guarantees a probate court proceeding, which costs money and takes time.
Where a revocable living trust succeeds: Assets transfer privately and quickly to beneficiaries without court involvement, you retain full control during your lifetime, reduces estate taxes in larger estates.
Where a revocable living trust fails: Requires proper funding (transferring assets into the trust), more complex to set up, slightly higher upfront cost.
The verdict: For most Utah families with property, minor children, or blended family situations, a revocable living trust paired with a pour-over will provides the most complete protection. A will alone leaves your family exposed to probate.
Thinking about which approach fits your situation? Let’s talk. We’ll walk you through your options – no pressure. Contact us for a straightforward conversation.
The Utah Probate Process When There’s No Will
Phase 1: Petition for Administration (Weeks 1-4)
A family member petitions the Utah probate court to open the estate. The court appoints a personal administrator – someone who may not be who you would have chosen.
Key actions during this phase:
- Filing petition with applicable Washington County (or relevant) district court
- Publication of notice to creditors (required by Utah law)
- Court hearing scheduled
Utah probate court filing fees typically range from $375 to $500 or more depending on estate value and court.
Phase 2: Asset Inventory and Creditor Claims (Months 2-5)
The administrator inventories every asset, notifies creditors, and waits the statutory creditor claim period before distributing anything.
Phase 3: Distribution Per Intestacy Formula (Months 5-18)
Assets distribute according to Utah’s statutory formula – not according to any conversation you had or relationship you valued. Attorney and court costs come out of the estate first.
Your Estate Planning Action Plan
- Step 1 – Inventory Your Assets: List all property, accounts, retirement funds, and life insurance. Know what you own before deciding how to protect it.
- Step 2 – Identify Your Beneficiaries: Decide specifically who should receive what – including people the state formula might exclude entirely.
- Step 3 – Choose Between Will, Trust, or Both: Most families benefit from a trust plus a pour-over will. Review the comparison table above.
- Step 4 – Appoint a Guardian for Minor Children: This can only be done through a valid will. Without one, a judge decides.
- Step 5 – Execute and Fund Your Documents: Signing is just the start. Trusts must be funded – meaning assets must be retitled into the trust – or the process fails.
- Step 6 – Review Every 3-5 Years: Life changes. Your estate plan should reflect those changes, especially after marriage, divorce, births, or major asset changes.
Documents to Gather Before Your Consultation
- ☐ Recent account statements (bank, investment, retirement)
- ☐ Real property deeds
- ☐ Life insurance policy documents
- ☐ Existing estate documents (if any)
- ☐ Names and contact info for intended beneficiaries
- ☐ Names of proposed guardians for minor children
Common Mistakes That Make Things Worse
The most common mistake we see is assuming a will avoids probate. It does not. A second frequent error is creating a trust but never transferring assets into it – an unfunded trust provides almost no benefit. Third, many people name only one beneficiary with no contingent (backup) beneficiary, leaving the estate in limbo if that person predeceases you.
Utah families in communities like St. George, Hurricane, Cedar City, Santa Clara, Ivins, Washington, and La Verkin face the same risks. Geography doesn’t protect you from intestacy – only proper documents do.
As a member of the American Academy of Estate Planning Attorneys – an organization that requires significantly more estate-planning-specific legal education than the state bar mandates – Terry Law Firm, PLLC. brings a focused, informed approach to every estate plan we create. For a complete overview of how we can help, visit our services page.
Key Takeaways for Utah Families in 2025
- No will means no control – Utah’s intestacy formula distributes your assets without your input
- A will does not avoid probate – only a properly funded trust does
- Unmarried partners inherit nothing – without explicit documentation, long-term partners are legally invisible
- Guardian appointment requires a valid will – without one, a judge decides who raises your children
- Estate plans need regular updates – especially after major life changes in 2025 or 2026
Frequently Asked Questions
Does having a will allow me to avoid probate in Utah?
No – a will essentially guarantees probate. A will must be submitted to and validated by the probate court before assets can be distributed. A properly funded revocable living trust is the most common way Utah residents avoid probate entirely.
If I put my assets in a trust, do I lose control over them?
With a revocable living trust, you retain full control as the trustee. You can buy, sell, transfer, or manage trust assets exactly as you do now. Control only shifts when you pass away or become incapacitated.
What happens to my minor children if I die without a will in Utah?
A Utah judge appoints a guardian based on what the court determines is in the child’s best interest. This may not align with your preferences. Only a valid will allows you to nominate a guardian of your choosing.
How long does Utah probate take when there’s no will?
Utah intestate probate typically takes 6 to 18 months depending on estate complexity and creditor claims. Contested estates or those involving real property in multiple counties can take longer and cost significantly more.
What does estate planning typically cost in Utah?
Estate planning costs vary by complexity, but industry ranges in Utah generally fall between $1,000 and $2,500 for a basic will package and $3,500 to $5,000 for a full trust-based plan (2025 market context). These are general market figures, not specific fee quotes – contact us directly for your situation.
Who inherits if I have no living relatives in Utah?
If Utah’s intestacy formula finds no qualifying heirs, your entire estate escheats to the state. This is relatively rare but entirely preventable with a valid will or trust naming beneficiaries of your choice.
Your Next Step – Don’t Let the State Decide
There’s no good reason to leave your family with a court process, a state formula, and zero input from you. Utah’s intestacy laws are not designed to protect your relationships or reflect your wishes – they’re a legal default for people who never made a plan.
If you live in St. George or anywhere in Washington County and have been putting this off, 2025 is the year to stop waiting. Ready to take the next step? Contact us today for straight answers and a clear path forward. The team at Terry Law Firm, PLLC. is ready to help you build a plan that actually protects the people you care about.
This content is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Contact a licensed Utah attorney for guidance specific to your situation.
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