
Most people do not plan to die without a will. They mean to get around to it, or they assume their family knows what they would have wanted, or they believe their situation is simple enough that it will sort itself out. In Alabama, if no valid will exists when you die, the state does not wait for your family to reach an agreement. It applies its own set of rules, and those rules may have very little to do with what you actually intended.
What Intestate Means and Why It Matters
When someone dies without a valid will in Alabama, they have died intestate. That triggers a body of law called intestate succession, which establishes who inherits your property, in what amounts, and in what order. The system is not arbitrary. It reflects a legal framework designed to distribute property along family lines when no instructions exist.
The problem is that the formula was not written with your family in mind. It applies the same structure to every intestate estate regardless of the relationships, history, or circumstances involved.
It is also worth understanding what intestate succession does and does not govern. Assets with named beneficiaries, such as life insurance policies, retirement accounts, and transfer-on-death accounts, pass directly to those beneficiaries outside of the probate process. Jointly held property with right of survivorship works the same way. What intestate succession controls is everything else: property that has no other legal mechanism for transfer.
How Alabama Divides Assets Between a Spouse and Children
The distribution of your estate depends significantly on your family structure at the time of your death. Alabama law draws careful distinctions, and the outcomes can surprise families who assumed the division would be straightforward.
If you were married with no children, your surviving spouse inherits the entire estate. No other relatives have a claim in that scenario.
When children are also surviving, the picture changes. If all of your children are also children of your surviving spouse, Alabama law gives the spouse the first $50,000 of the estate plus half of the remaining balance. Your children divide the rest equally.
If any of your surviving children are not children of your surviving spouse, which is common in second marriages and blended families, the spouse receives half the estate. The children divide the other half. That distinction can significantly affect how much a surviving spouse actually receives, and it is one of the more common points of confusion and conflict in blended family situations.
One detail that surprises many parents: in Alabama, children inherit outright at age 19, which is the state’s age of majority. If a child is a minor when the estate is distributed, the court may appoint a conservator to manage the assets until the child reaches 19. At that point, they receive their inheritance without restriction, regardless of whether you would have considered that appropriate for your child at that age.
When There Is No Spouse or Children
If no spouse or children survive you, Alabama law moves through the next tier of relatives. Your estate passes first to your parents if they are living. If neither parent survives, it moves to your siblings, then to grandparents, then to aunts and uncles, then to cousins. In the rare case that no qualifying relatives can be located, the estate escheats to the state of Alabama.
Who Runs the Estate When There Is No Will
This is a question families often do not consider until they are already dealing with the loss.
When someone dies with a will, they typically name an executor, the person responsible for managing the estate through probate and carrying out its instructions. When there is no will, there is no named executor. The probate court appoints an administrator instead.
The administrator is usually a close family member, but that is the court’s determination to make, not the family’s. Once appointed, the administrator takes on a defined set of responsibilities: identifying and valuing assets, notifying creditors, paying valid debts and taxes, and distributing what remains according to the intestacy laws. Alabama requires an inventory of the estate within 45 days of the administrator’s appointment, and creditors generally have six months to file claims before the estate can be distributed.
That six-month window is a floor, not a ceiling. Intestate estates, particularly those involving real property, disputes among heirs, or complex asset structures, can take considerably longer to resolve than estates guided by a clear will. Families who expected a straightforward process sometimes find themselves navigating months of court oversight they were not prepared for.
The Mobile County Probate Court publishes a detailed overview of this process, including the full powers and duties of a personal representative: Administration of an Intestate Estate – Mobile County Probate Court.
When no administrator is named in advance, the question of who fills that role can itself become a source of conflict. If multiple family members believe they should be the one managing the estate, the court will resolve it, but that process takes time, and the strain on relationships during an already difficult period can be significant.
Who the Law Leaves Out
Alabama’s intestate succession laws are built around legal relationships. They do not account for the full picture of how people actually live.
Unmarried partners do not inherit under intestate succession, regardless of how long the relationship lasted, how intertwined the finances were, or what the deceased person intended. Without a legal marriage, a surviving partner has no claim under Alabama law.
Stepchildren face the same reality. Unless a stepchild was legally adopted, they are not recognized as a child of the stepparent under intestate succession. A stepparent who intended to provide for a stepchild but never put that intention into a will leaves that child with nothing from the estate, regardless of the nature of their relationship.
Close friends, caregivers, and anyone outside the legal family structure are in the same position. The law does not recognize emotional closeness, years of support, or verbal promises. It follows legal relationships as defined.
Why the Formula Rarely Fits Real Life
For a straightforward family structure, Alabama’s intestate succession laws may produce an outcome close to what the person would have wanted. For most families, the fit is imperfect at best.
Modern families involve stepchildren, half-siblings, unmarried partners, estrangement, and relationships that do not map cleanly onto a legal hierarchy. The formula cannot account for the sibling who was estranged for decades but still inherits equally. It cannot account for the longtime partner who is left with nothing. It cannot account for the child who the deceased wanted to inherit only under certain conditions, or the stepchild who was treated as family in every practical sense but receives nothing under the law.
These are not edge cases. They are common family situations, and the intestate succession system was not designed to resolve them. It was designed to provide a default when no instructions exist.
What Changes With a Will
A will does not just determine who receives your property. It determines who is in charge of the process.
When you name an executor in your will, you are choosing a person you trust to manage your estate, communicate with creditors, handle the court process, and carry out your instructions. That choice matters as much as any distribution decision. The right person in that role can make the process significantly smoother for everyone involved.
A will also allows you to provide for people the intestacy laws would leave out. An unmarried partner, a stepchild, a close friend, a charitable organization. It allows you to set conditions on an inheritance rather than passing assets to a 19-year-old outright. It gives your family a clear set of instructions rather than a legal formula that may not reflect your relationships or your intentions.
Understanding the System Before You Need It
Dying without a will does not mean your estate goes unaddressed. Alabama has a process, and that process will run. What it means is that the decisions about your assets, and about who is responsible for distributing them, will be made by the state rather than by you.
For many families, understanding how that system works is the first step toward deciding whether a plan is needed and what that plan should accomplish. If this article raised questions about your own situation, a good place to start is the free guide we put together for Alabama families. The Estate Planning Book for Alabama Families covers wills, trusts, probate, 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.

This free guide covers what Alabama families need to know about wills, trusts, probate, and choosing the right plan for your situation. Written by Mark Eiland, founder of Heircraft Planning.
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.
