Estate Planning for Blended Families

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Blended families, with children from prior relationships, a current spouse, and sometimes stepchildren, are common in Palm Beach. They are also where estate plans quietly fail, because Florida law gives a surviving spouse strong rights that can override what you assumed your will would do. This guide explains those rules, the planning tools that work, and what to expect on cost and timing.

The Core Tension

The classic conflict is providing for your current spouse while making sure children from a prior marriage eventually inherit. Leaving everything outright to your spouse trusts that spouse to later pass it to your children, which is not legally enforceable. Florida’s default rules can compound the problem if you do not plan deliberately.

The Elective Share

Florida gives a surviving spouse an elective share, currently 30 percent of the elective estate under Section 732.2065 and the related statutes, even if your will or trust leaves them less. This means you cannot simply disinherit a spouse in favor of your children. A surviving spouse can also have rights to family allowance and exempt property. In a blended family, ignoring the elective share can blow up an otherwise careful plan.

Homestead Adds Another Layer

Florida’s homestead protection (Article X, Section 4) restricts how you can leave your primary Palm Beach residence if you are survived by a spouse or minor child. A common result is that the surviving spouse receives a life estate (or can elect a half interest) and your descendants receive the remainder, regardless of what your will says. Blended families must plan around this rather than assume the house simply goes where the will directs.

The Tool That Usually Solves It

A revocable trust under Chapter 736, often paired with provisions for the surviving spouse, is the workhorse for blended families. A trust can provide income and support to your spouse for life while preserving the underlying assets for your children at the spouse’s death. This delivers the dual goal that an outright gift cannot guarantee. Coordinating the trust with a properly considered marital agreement and the elective share is the key to making it hold up.

Do Not Forget the Forms

Beneficiary designations on retirement accounts and life insurance, and any joint ownership, override your will and trust. In blended families these are a frequent failure point, an old designation naming a prior spouse, or a joint account that hands everything to one side of the family. Every form must be reviewed alongside the trust.

The Cost and Timeline

Blended-family planning costs more than a basic will because it requires careful drafting, coordination of the trust, designations, deeds, and sometimes a marital agreement. Expect a few meetings over several weeks. The alternative, litigation among a spouse and stepchildren after death, is far more expensive and slow, and often plays out in Palm Beach County probate court. Florida has no state estate or inheritance tax, so the goal here is family clarity, not tax avoidance.

Talk to a Florida Attorney

Blended families have the most to lose from a generic plan and the most to gain from a tailored one. A Palm Beach estate planning attorney can balance spousal rights, homestead, and your children’s inheritance in a coordinated plan. This article is general information about Florida law, not legal advice for your specific family.

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DISCLAIMER: The information provided in this blog is for informational purposes only and should not be considered legal advice. The content of this blog may not reflect the most current legal developments. No attorney-client relationship is formed by reading this blog or contacting Morgan Legal Group PLLP.

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