Mutual Wills Package with Last Wills and Testaments for Married Couple with Adult Children - Kansas 2026

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  1. Click ‘Get Form’ to open it in the editor.
  2. Begin by entering your name in Field [1], followed by your spouse's name in Field [4].
  3. In Article One, list the names and birth dates of your adult children in Fields [5] through [10].
  4. For specific bequests, fill out Article Three by typing the names, addresses, and relationships of individuals receiving property in Fields [11] through [28]. If no specific property is to be left, indicate 'none'.
  5. In Article Four, specify your spouse as the recipient of your homestead in Field [29].
  6. Complete Articles Five and Six by designating your spouse or children as beneficiaries for the remainder of your estate.
  7. Designate a Personal Representative in Article Seven using Fields [34] and [35].
  8. Review all entries for accuracy before printing. Ensure you sign the document in front of two witnesses.

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If the common intention is expressed in one instrument, the will may be called a joint will, and if the testators have executed two separate instrument to manifest their common intention, the will may be called a mutual will.
Married couples who agree on how they want their estates distributed after they die might assume a joint will is a good idea. However, for a number of reasons, creating separate is a better idea.
Different Times of Death is the Most Important Reason For Separate Will For Husband and Wife. The chances are quite high that you will not pass away at the same time. If you have a joint will when one of you passes away, it can be much more difficult to work through executing the will for just the other party.
For example, Mr and Mrs Smith draw up mutual Wills at the same time, initially leaving their entire estate to each other. Both Wills go on to state that, following the death of the second spouse, all assets will go to their children.
Mirror-image wills are a great option for married couples. Theyre drafted almost identically, with each testator (the person making the will) signing their own will. Generally, theyre mirror-image simple wills.

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People also ask

Many states, if a person dies, is married and has children with their spouse, everything will go to the spouse. However, if the person who dies, has children with someone other than the wife, most times the assets are split 50/50 between the spouse the other children.
In many states(most?) inheritance, to a married person, it is owned solely by the spouse who inherits it. It becomes community property if the inheritance money is intermingled with jointly owned money such as a married couples joint bank account. In that case the inheritance becomes jointly owned by both spouses.
Mutual wills are based on the agreement of both partners that the surviving partner wont change their will after the other dies.

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