Last Will and Testament for other Persons - Kentucky 2025

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In Kentucky, the term next of kin is often used synonymously with the term heirs. Next of kin heirs for purposes of intestate inheritance in Kentucky are generally the: Surviving spouse. Children and descendants. Parents.
The children of the person who has died inherit the whole estate. This applies however much the estate is worth. If there are 2 or more children, the estate will be divided equally between them.
If a decedent is survived solely by children, those children are afforded the entirety of the intestate estate, ing to Kentucky inheritance laws. Other than that, the children are given half of the estate if their deceased parent was married at the time of his or her death, ing to dower and curtesy laws.
A Kentucky will must be signed by two witnesses. The witnesses cannot be people who are beneficiaries of the will or whose spouses are beneficiaries of the will. The wrong witnesses can make a will invalid and change the amount received by beneficiaries.
When someone dies without a will, property generally goes first to a surviving spouse, then to children, and then to other family members.
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The law requires witnesses, not notarization The good news for those trying to put together a will is that they do not have to coordinate with a notary or pay them for their time. State law does not require notarization for a will to be a valid and enforceable testamentary instrument.
Who Gets What in Kentucky? If you die with:heres what happens: children but no spouse children inherit everything spouse and descendants spouse inherits 1/2 of your personal property and 1/2 of your real property to sell or give away descendants inherit 1/2 of your personal property and the remainder of your real property4 more rows

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