will
A legal document expressing a person's wishes for the distribution of assets after death and the care of minor children, subject to probate court oversight.
Example
“Without a will, the state's intestacy laws determined how his estate was divided — not his actual wishes.”
Memory Tip
A WILL expresses your WILL (wishes) for your estate. Without one, the state decides.
Why It Matters
A will is crucial for personal finance because it ensures your assets go to the people you want them to go to and provides instructions for caring for your minor children. Without a will, state laws determine how your estate is distributed, which may not align with your wishes and can create family conflict during an already difficult time.
Common Misconception
Many people believe that having a will automatically avoids probate court, but this is incorrect. A will must go through probate, which is a court process that validates the document and oversees asset distribution, potentially taking months or years and incurring legal fees.
In Practice
If a person dies with a $500,000 estate and a valid will naming their three children as beneficiaries, the will directs the probate court to distribute roughly $167,000 to each child after debts and taxes are paid. Without a will, those same three children might receive unequal amounts based on state inheritance laws, and the process could take considerably longer.
Etymology
From Old English 'willa' (desire, wish) — a document expressing your WISHES after death.
Common Misspellings
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