Planning for an Estranged Child in Your Estate Plan: What Portland, Oregon Estate Planning Attorneys Want You to Consider
Family estrangement is more common than most people talk about openly, and it creates one of the more delicate planning situations we encounter as Portland, Oregon estate planning attorneys. The parent who is no longer in contact with a child, but does not want to cut them out entirely, is navigating a situation that requires more legal care than most people realize.
The instinct is often to set it aside. To figure it out later. To hope the relationship improves before the question becomes urgent. But an estate plan that doesn't directly address an estranged child, in either direction, can create exactly the kind of conflict and legal exposure you were hoping to avoid.
Why Silence Is Not a Safe Choice
If a child is not mentioned in your will or trust at all, most states have laws designed to protect children who may have been accidentally overlooked. These are called pretermitted heir statutes, and they exist to prevent unintentional disinheritance. The problem is that they cannot distinguish between a child you forgot to include and a child you deliberately chose not to address.
If your estranged child is not named and not explicitly accounted for, they may have legal grounds to claim a share of your estate regardless of your intentions. That claim lands in court, costs money, and forces your other heirs to defend a plan that was never properly prepared for this situation.
What Does Intentional Planning Actually Look Like Here?
The goal is to document your intentions clearly enough that they cannot be successfully challenged. That means naming the estranged child in your documents, acknowledging their existence, and stating explicitly what you intend for them to receive, even if that amount is modest.
A no-contest clause, sometimes called an in terrorem clause, is another tool worth discussing with your attorney. This provision discourages beneficiaries from challenging the plan by making any unsuccessful challenge grounds for forfeiting their inheritance entirely. It does not prevent a challenge, but it raises the stakes of bringing one.
What About the Personal Representative (Executor) or Trustee?
If your estranged child is receiving something under your plan, the person administering your estate will need to locate them, communicate with them, and potentially coordinate a distribution. That process can be complicated when a relationship is strained. Choosing a personal representative (executor) or trustee who is equipped to handle that dynamic, and who is not personally caught in the middle of it, is a meaningful part of the planning decision.
What If the Estrangement Is the Child's Choice, Not Yours?
This is a distinction that matters emotionally more than legally, but it still shapes how some clients want to approach their plan. Some parents want to leave a door open. Others want to honor a boundary that the child themselves established. Either intention can be structured into a plan. What it requires is a direct conversation with your attorney about what you actually want, not what feels easiest to say out loud.
This Conversation Deserves a Real Plan
Estrangement is painful enough without leaving your estate plan to interpret it after you are gone. The kindest thing you can do for everyone involved, including the estranged child, is to make your intentions clear and legally defensible while you still can.
If this situation is part of your family's reality, we invite you to reach out and schedule a consultation with our office. These are exactly the conversations we are here to help you navigate.