
Divorce changes more than a relationship. It also changes the assumptions built into many estate plans.
When estate planning documents are created during marriage, a spouse is often named in several important roles. The spouse may be the primary beneficiary of assets, the executor responsible for administering the estate, or the person authorized to make financial or medical decisions if incapacity occurs.
When a marriage ends, those assumptions may no longer reflect a person’s wishes. Because of this, divorce is one of the most important life events that should trigger a review of an estate plan.
Without updates, older documents may still contain instructions written during the marriage, which can lead to confusion or unintended results later.
Estate Planning Documents Commonly Affected by Divorce
Several estate planning documents frequently include provisions involving a spouse. After divorce, these documents should typically be reviewed to determine whether revisions are appropriate.
Common documents affected include:
- wills
- revocable trusts
- beneficiary designations on financial accounts
- durable powers of attorney
- health care directives
- guardian nominations for minor children
Even if property division is addressed in the divorce settlement, these planning documents may still contain provisions written long before the divorce occurred.
Alabama Law and Former Spouses in Wills
Alabama law addresses certain situations involving former spouses in estate planning documents.
In many cases, a divorce revokes provisions in a will that benefit a former spouse. The law may treat the former spouse as though they predeceased the person who created the will. This typically removes the former spouse from roles such as executor and cancels gifts made directly to them.
However, the remainder of the will usually remains valid.
Because the document itself stays in place, assets may pass to alternate beneficiaries listed years earlier rather than reflecting the person’s current wishes. For that reason, estate planning attorneys often recommend reviewing the entire estate plan after divorce rather than relying solely on statutory changes.
Beneficiary Designations Often Control Asset Transfers
Many financial assets pass outside the probate process through beneficiary designations. These designations are common for assets such as:
- life insurance policies
- retirement accounts, including IRAs and 401(k)s
- payable-on-death bank accounts
- transfer-on-death investment accounts
These designations frequently control how the asset transfers, regardless of what a will says. If a former spouse remains listed as the beneficiary, the account may transfer according to that designation.
For this reason, reviewing financial accounts is an important part of updating an estate plan after divorce.
Reviewing Fiduciary Appointments
Estate plans typically name trusted individuals to carry out important responsibilities. During marriage, a spouse often fills many of these roles.
These positions may include:
- executor of the estate
- trustee of a trust
- agent under a durable power of attorney
- health care decision-maker
After divorce, individuals often reconsider who should serve in these positions. Choosing the right person to act in these roles can significantly affect how smoothly an estate plan is administered.
Planning for Children After Divorce
Divorce also raises planning considerations for families with minor children.
Estate plans often include provisions addressing guardianship nominations and the management of inheritance for children. Trusts are frequently used to hold assets for minors until they reach certain ages or milestones.
Although the other parent usually retains parental rights, other roles such as trustees or backup guardians should still be reviewed to ensure they reflect current family circumstances.
Estate Planning Issues Attorneys Often See After Divorce
Estate planning and family law attorneys often encounter situations where estate planning documents were never updated following a divorce.
Several issues can arise in these situations, such as
- Outdated documents may still list a former spouse in decision-making roles.
- Financial accounts may still name the former spouse as beneficiary.
- Alternate beneficiaries listed long ago may inherit assets in ways the individual never intended.
These situations illustrate why reviewing estate planning documents after major life events is an important part of long-term planning.
Taking the Next Step
Divorce is handled through the family court system, but its effects often extend well beyond the divorce decree. Estate plans are built around relationships and responsibilities. When those relationships change, the documents guiding financial and personal decisions should be reviewed as well.
Alabama law provides certain automatic protections when a marriage ends, but those provisions do not replace a comprehensive review of the full estate plan. The statutory defaults address some references to a former spouse. They do not rebuild a plan around what a person actually wants now.
Updating an estate plan after divorce is not just about removing a former spouse’s name. It is about making sure the right people have authority, the right beneficiaries are in place, and the documents reflect the life that exists after the marriage ended.
If this article raised questions about your own estate plan, the free guide we put together for Alabama families is a good place to start. The Estate Planning Book for Alabama Families covers wills, trusts, beneficiary designations, and how to think through your options, written by Mark Eiland, founder of Heircraft Planning. You can download it at no cost on our website.
Heircraft Planning also offers free educational seminars in Mobile for individuals and families who want to explore these topics in depth. Light dinner is provided. You can find upcoming dates and register at heircraftplanning.com/upcoming-events. If you are ready to talk through your specific situation, you are also welcome to schedule a consultation directly.
