Here is the part most people never hear until it is too late: if you die in New York without a valid will, you do not simply “leave everything to your family.” Instead, the State of New York writes the plan for you. A rigid statute — not your wishes, not a conversation you once had at the kitchen table — decides exactly who gets what. That is what lawyers mean by intestacy, and in New York it is governed by EPTL Article 4 (the Estates, Powers and Trusts Law).
This page is a modern, plain-language walkthrough for today’s New York families — whether you are in a Brooklyn co-op, a Long Island ranch house, a Westchester split-level, a Hudson Valley farmhouse, or an Upstate apartment. The rules are the same statewide. Our goal is simple: show you, in clear terms, what happens when there is no will, why the result often surprises people, and how a properly drafted will (see our will drafting overview) puts you back in control.
Intestacy in One Sentence
When you die intestate (without a will), New York’s “default” distribution scheme under EPTL Article 4 hands your property to your closest living relatives — your distributees, or next of kin — in a fixed order set by statute. No more, no less. There is no room for a favorite niece, a longtime partner you never married, a stepchild you raised, a charity you loved, or a friend who became family. The law does not know them. It only knows blood and marriage.
Who Inherits When There Is No Will (EPTL Article 4)
The chart below is the modern, simplified version of New York’s intestacy hierarchy. It reflects the order in which relatives inherit when a New Yorker dies with no will in place.
| Surviving Family | Who Inherits the Estate |
|---|---|
| Spouse, no children | Spouse takes everything |
| Children, no spouse | Children split everything equally |
| Spouse and children | Spouse takes the first $50,000 plus half of the rest; children split the remaining half |
| No spouse, no children | Parents inherit |
| No spouse, children, or parents | Siblings (and their descendants) inherit |
| No close relatives at all | More distant kin per statute — and if none, the estate may ultimately pass (“escheat”) to the State |
A few modern realities worth underlining:
- An unmarried partner inherits nothing under intestacy. It does not matter how long you lived together or shared a home and a life. Without a will, the law treats your partner as a legal stranger.
- Stepchildren you never legally adopted inherit nothing under intestacy, even if you raised them.
- “Half” relatives (like a half-sibling) are generally treated the same as whole-blood relatives in New York’s scheme.
- A child conceived before but born after your death can still inherit if the statutory conditions are met.
If any of these outcomes feels wrong to you, that is exactly the signal to make a will. See our page on New York will requirements to understand what a valid will involves.
Why the “Default Plan” Catches Families Off Guard
The intestacy statute was written for an average case. Modern New York families are rarely average. Consider three quick, realistic scenarios:
- The blended family. You have two children from a first marriage and a current spouse. Under intestacy, your spouse takes the first $50,000 plus half of the rest, and your children split the other half — whether or not that reflects what anyone in the family expected.
- The lifelong partners. You and your partner of 20 years never married. With no will, your partner inherits nothing, and your property flows to relatives you may not have spoken to in years.
- The chosen family. The friend who showed up during every hospital stay, the godchild you adored — none of them appear anywhere in the intestacy chart.
A will written under New York law lets you replace that default with your plan. That is the whole point of the will drafting process.
How a Will Changes the Outcome — and How New York Makes a Will Valid
A will is your override switch. But New York will not honor just any document. The execution rules in EPTL §3-2.1 are precise, and skipping a step can invalidate the entire will — sending your estate right back into intestacy. Here is the modern checklist:
- Two witnesses (at least). New York requires a minimum of two attesting witnesses.
- One 30-day window. Both witnesses must sign within a single 30-day period (and the law applies a rebuttable presumption that this requirement was met).
- Sign at the end. The testator (the person making the will) must sign at the end of the document. Another person may sign for the testator, but only in the testator’s presence and at their direction.
- Publication. The testator must declare to the witnesses that the instrument is their will.
- Presence or acknowledgment. The testator either signs in front of the witnesses or acknowledges that signature to each of them; the witnesses then sign at the testator’s request and add their residence addresses.
For a deeper walkthrough of these mechanics, see our pages on New York will requirements and will execution. And if your life circumstances change — a new child, a move, a marriage or divorce — you may not need a brand-new will at all; a codicil or amendment can update an existing one, provided it is executed with the same EPTL §3-2.1 formalities.
Two Quick Clarifications That Trip People Up
A will only works after death — and only through Surrogate’s Court. A will takes effect only at death and must be admitted to probate in the Surrogate’s Court before anyone can act on it. While you are alive, your will controls nothing.
A “living will” is a completely different document. A living will is a health-care / end-of-life instrument that speaks to medical wishes — it does not distribute your property. Do not confuse the two. Learn more on our living will page, and keep your property will planning separate from your health-care planning.
One More Modern Safeguard: The Spousal Right of Election
Even when there is a will, New York protects a surviving spouse from being cut out entirely. Under the spousal right of election (EPTL 5-1.1-A), a surviving spouse may claim a statutory minimum share of the estate regardless of what the will says. It is a reminder that New York law layers protections on top of personal choice — and one more reason to plan with an attorney who understands how these rules interact rather than fight against them.
Frequently Asked Questions
What happens if I die in New York with no will?
Your estate is distributed under EPTL Article 4 to your closest relatives in a fixed statutory order — spouse, then children, then parents, then siblings, and so on. You lose all say over who inherits, and unmarried partners, stepchildren, friends, and charities receive nothing.
Does my spouse automatically get everything if I have no will?
Only if you have no children. If you leave a spouse and children, your spouse takes the first $50,000 plus half of the remaining estate, and your children split the other half under New York’s intestacy rules.
Can my long-term unmarried partner inherit under intestacy?
No. Under New York intestacy, an unmarried partner is treated as a legal stranger and inherits nothing. The only reliable way to provide for a partner is a valid will (or other estate-planning tools) executed under EPTL §3-2.1.
Is a “living will” the same as a regular will?
No. A living will is a health-care document about end-of-life and medical decisions. It does not transfer property. A property will is a separate instrument that must be admitted to probate in the Surrogate’s Court. See our living will page.
Can I change my will if my family situation changes?
Yes. You can revise a will with a new will or a codicil, but it must be executed with the same EPTL §3-2.1 formalities — including two witnesses signing within one 30-day period. See codicils and amendments.
Take Control Before the State Does
New York’s intestacy statute is a safety net, not a plan. If you want your property to follow your wishes — protecting a partner, a blended family, or a chosen family the statute would ignore — the answer is a properly drafted, properly executed will.
Attorney Russel Morgan, Esq. and the team at Morgan Legal Group help New York families across NYC, Long Island, Westchester, the Hudson Valley, and Upstate replace the default plan with one that is genuinely theirs.
Schedule a consultation with Russel Morgan, Esq. and start your will drafting the modern way — clearly, carefully, and on your terms.
Further reading from Morgan Legal Group: the last will and testament in New York.