What Inheritance Rights Does My Adopted Child Have?

 In Estate Planning, Probate

Typically, adopted children have the same legal right to inherit assets from their adoptive parents as biological children do. When a child is adopted, their legal ties to their biological parents are severed. This means that they have inheritance rights with their adoptive parents, but not with their birth parents.

Adopted children have the right to be included in general references to “my children” in a Will. They may also have the right to receive property if they are accidentally or unintentionally left out of a Will. For example, if a Will had not been updates since before the adoption of a child, then that adopted child still has rights to a certain portion of the estate. An adopted child also has the right to receive property in intestate succession, meaning that, if a child’s adoptive parents die without a Will, then the child has the same right to receive a certain portion of the adoptive parents’ property as a biological child would.

Just like with a biological child, you can disinherit an adopted child from your Will, but if you choose to do so you should state this explicitly.

To learn more about this matter, contact our office at 941-906-1231 to schedule an appointment with one of our attorneys.

 

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