
Getting married later in life often feels like a fresh start. There is usually more financial stability, more clarity about what matters, and more intention behind the decision than there may have been decades earlier. For many people, it is also a chance to build something meaningful alongside someone they genuinely chose.
That said, remarriage does come with a layer of complexity that a first marriage often does not. Most people who remarry are bringing a full financial life into the relationship: retirement accounts, a paid-down home, life insurance, and often children from a prior marriage who have their own expectations about what they will one day inherit.
What makes remarriage particularly complicated in Alabama is that the state does not leave the question of inheritance entirely up to you. Alabama law gives a surviving spouse legal rights to a share of an estate regardless of what a will says. Understanding how those rights work, and how they interact with the needs of a blended family, is the starting point for building a plan that actually does what you intend. And when that plan is in place, the people you love can be protected exactly the way you chose.
What Rights Does a Surviving Spouse Have in Alabama, Even Without a Plan?
Alabama law gives a surviving spouse two different sets of rights depending on whether the deceased spouse had a will.
If there is no will, Alabama’s intestacy laws govern. Under those rules, when a person dies with children who are not also the children of the surviving spouse, the surviving spouse receives the first fifty thousand dollars of the estate plus one half of the remainder. The other half goes to the decedent’s children. That split may sound reasonable in the abstract, but for a family where the deceased spouse intended most of their assets to go to their own children, the result can feel like a significant departure from what they wanted.
If there is a will, the surviving spouse still has options. Under Alabama Code Section 43-8-70, a surviving spouse has the right to override the will entirely and claim what is called an elective share. That share is the lesser of one-third of the decedent’s estate or the total estate value reduced by the value of the surviving spouse’s own separate assets. The elective share exists because a spouse cannot be disinherited by will alone.
The elective share calculation is based on the probate estate as it exists at death. Alabama did not adopt the augmented estate approach used in some other states, which means assets held in a revocable living trust are generally not pulled into the calculation the way they would be elsewhere. That distinction matters for how planning works here, and it is one reason why the structure of a plan, not just whether one exists, affects the outcome.
Do Stepchildren Have Any Automatic Rights Under Alabama Law?
Stepchildren have no automatic inheritance rights under Alabama law. If no estate plan exists, Alabama’s intestacy laws distribute assets among legal relatives, a category that does not include stepchildren regardless of how close the relationship was or how long they lived as a family.
This creates a specific and common problem in blended families. A person remarries and assumes that the children they have helped raise, or the children who have been part of their life for years, will be provided for. Without a will or trust that specifically names those children, they receive nothing. The estate passes to the surviving spouse and to the decedent’s biological children. The stepchildren have no legal claim.
The same logic applies in reverse. A person who dies may have assumed the surviving spouse would eventually pass assets to all the children in the household. Whether that happens depends entirely on what the surviving spouse chooses to do with their own estate. Nothing in the law requires them to do anything for children who are not biologically or legally theirs. A thoughtfully written plan changes all of that. It gives you the ability to provide for every person who matters to you, on your own terms.
Where Does the Real Conflict Come From in a Blended Family?
The tension in most remarried families is not difficult to describe. One spouse wants the surviving spouse to be financially secure. That same spouse also wants their own children to receive a meaningful inheritance. Without a plan that addresses both goals, those two outcomes compete with each other.
The most common and costly mistake is the simple reciprocal will, where each spouse leaves everything to the other with children named as secondary beneficiaries. In a first marriage with shared children, that arrangement works as intended. In a blended family, it means everything goes to the surviving spouse, who is then legally free to change their own estate plan. The first spouse’s children receive nothing. That result is not fraud or bad faith. It is simply what the law allows when no structure prevents it.
The opposite problem is equally predictable. A person leaves most of their estate to their children from a prior marriage and provides only modestly for the surviving spouse. That spouse, now widowed and perhaps financially dependent on the deceased spouse’s income, exercises the right to an elective share. The children’s inheritance is reduced, not by any wrongdoing, but by a legal right that the plan never accounted for.
Both situations are foreseeable. Both are avoidable. Neither resolves itself without intentional planning that addresses the specific tension between what a surviving spouse is entitled to and what children from a prior relationship are expecting to receive. The good news is that when blended families do plan thoughtfully, both goals are achievable. A spouse can be financially secure and children can receive a meaningful inheritance. The plan just has to be built to do both.
What Planning Structures Actually Resolve This Tension?
The most commonly used solution for blended families is a trust structure that provides for the surviving spouse during their lifetime while preserving the principal for children after the spouse’s death. A Qualified Terminable Interest Property trust, commonly called a QTIP trust, is designed specifically for this purpose.
With a QTIP trust, the deceased spouse’s assets pass into the trust at death. The surviving spouse receives income from the trust for the rest of their life, and may have access to principal under defined circumstances. When the surviving spouse dies, the remaining trust assets pass to the beneficiaries the first spouse designated, typically their own children. The surviving spouse cannot change who ultimately receives the principal. That is what makes the structure reliable in a blended family context.
The QTIP trust satisfies the goal of providing for the surviving spouse without giving that spouse unlimited control over assets that the deceased spouse intended for their children. It also qualifies for the federal estate tax marital deduction, meaning assets passing into the trust are not subject to federal estate tax at the first death. For many blended families, this structure is exactly what allows them to honor both relationships at once.
Separate trusts for each spouse are another option, particularly when each spouse has distinct assets and children and wants to maintain clear lines between the two. Each trust governs its own assets independently, which eliminates the problem of one spouse’s decisions affecting the other’s children.
A prenuptial or postnuptial agreement is frequently part of this planning as well. If the surviving spouse has waived their elective share rights in writing, with full financial disclosure and independent legal counsel, the plan operates with considerably more certainty. Without that waiver, any trust structure must be designed with the elective share in mind rather than assume it will not be exercised.
Who Is Actually in Charge, and Why Does That Question Matter?
In a blended family trust structure, the trustee is the person who carries out the plan after the first spouse dies. That role involves real decisions: how assets are invested, whether discretionary distributions to the surviving spouse are appropriate, and how to handle requests that stretch the trust’s terms. The trustee is legally obligated to honor those instructions, and that obligation runs to the ultimate beneficiaries, the children, not to the surviving spouse.
Trustee selection in a blended family requires particular care. A family member close to the surviving spouse may feel pressure to favor that spouse. One who is close to the children may create friction with the spouse. A professional or institutional trustee brings neutrality but may lack familiarity with the family’s specific circumstances.
There is no universal right answer to who should serve. What matters is that the decision is made deliberately, with an understanding of what the trustee will actually be asked to do and what relationships will be affected by their decisions. A plan that drafts the trust carefully but fails to think through the trustee question has addressed only part of the problem.
What About Accounts and Assets That Do Not Pass Through a Will at All?
Retirement accounts, life insurance policies, and payable-on-death bank accounts pass directly to whoever is named as beneficiary on the account itself. A will does not control those assets. A trust does not control them unless the trust is specifically named as beneficiary. They go where the beneficiary designation says, period.
In a remarriage, this creates an immediate and concrete issue. Accounts opened before the marriage may still name a former spouse, adult children, or someone else as beneficiary. Updating those designations is not automatic when someone remarries. A new spouse may have no legal claim to those assets regardless of what the will or trust says.
The reverse problem is also common. A person who remarries and updates their retirement account beneficiary to name the new spouse may inadvertently remove children who expected to inherit those accounts. That change happens quietly, often without anyone realizing the downstream effect.
A complete estate plan for a remarried Alabama family must account for how every asset passes, not just what the will or trust addresses. Beneficiary designations, account titling, and the documents governing non-probate transfers need to be reviewed and aligned with the overall plan. When they are not, the plan on paper and the outcome in practice can be very different things.
Why Does Timing Matter When You Remarry?
Alabama has specific rules about what happens when someone gets married after making a will and dies without updating it. A spouse who was omitted from a will because it predates the marriage may be entitled to an intestate share of the estate under Alabama’s pretermitted spouse provisions. The effect is that an outdated will may produce a substantially different outcome than the one it was drafted to achieve, and not necessarily the outcome anyone would have chosen.
Prenuptial agreements must be signed before the wedding. That timing is not flexible. A couple who marries and then tries to address spousal rights through a postnuptial agreement can do so, but the legal requirements differ and the dynamic of negotiating those terms after the marriage has already begun is different from doing it before. Having that conversation while both parties are clear-eyed about their intentions and finances, before the ceremony, is consistently less complicated.
The window for creating a plan that genuinely reflects what both spouses want is open before and immediately around the marriage. The longer that planning is deferred, the more likely it is that the state’s default rules will govern the outcome rather than the couple’s own decisions.
What Happens When There Is No Plan for a Blended Family in Alabama?
Alabama law fills in the blanks when an estate plan does not address a specific situation. In a first marriage with shared children, those defaults often align reasonably well with what families would have chosen. In a remarriage with children from prior relationships, the defaults frequently produce outcomes that neither spouse intended and no one anticipated.
The gap between what the law does automatically and what a blended family actually wants is closeable. What it requires is understanding how the system works clearly enough to make deliberate decisions: about trustee authority, spousal rights, beneficiary designations, and who ultimately controls what. Families who put that plan in place do not have to leave those questions to chance. They get to answer them themselves.
Free Resources from Heircraft Planning
If you would like to learn more, Heircraft Planning offers several free resources. You can download our free estate planning guide, watch an on-demand webinar, or browse our full blog library at heircraftplanning.com. Free in-person seminars are held throughout the year in Mobile. View upcoming dates and register at heircraftplanning.com/upcoming-events.
Ready to Take the Next Step?
If you are ready to take the next step, you can schedule a consultation with our team at heircraftplanning.com. We are here to help you understand your options and put a plan in place that reflects what matters most to you.
