

If you do not have any living grandparents, your property will go to your closest living relatives.If you do not have aunts, uncles, or first cousins, your property will go to your grandparents to share equally.If you have no brothers or sisters, your property will go to your aunts, uncles, and first cousins to share equally.If your parents are both deceased, your property will go to your brothers and sisters to share equally (half brothers and sisters share equally with whole-blood siblings).If you do not have any children, your property will go to your father and mother to share equally.If one of your children dies before you, that child's share will be split equally between his or her children, if any. If you do not leave a spouse or domestic partner*, your property will go to your children.Your spouse or domestic partner has descendants who do not belong (by blood or adoption) to youĢ/3 (remaining share to your descendants)ġ/2 (remaining share to your descendants)

You have descendants who do not belong (by blood or adoption) to your spouse or domestic partner You leave surviving descendants (children, grandchildren, great-grandchildren, etc.)
#DOES A WILL HAVE TO BE NOTARIZED IN A PARTICULAR COUNTY HOW TO#
This resource answers common questions about who needs a will and how to make a will.
