Mutual Wills or Last Will and Testaments for Man and Woman living together, not Married with Minor Children - Wyoming 2026

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  1. Click ‘Get Form’ to open it in the editor.
  2. Begin by entering your name in Field [1] and your county of residence in Field [3].
  3. In Article One, specify the name of the person you reside with in Field [4] and list your minor children's names and birth dates in Fields [5]-[10]. You can delete unused fields if necessary.
  4. For Article Three, detail any specific bequests by filling out Fields [11]-[26], including names, addresses, relationships, and descriptions of property. If no property is left, type 'none'.
  5. In Articles Four and Five, designate who will receive your homestead and remaining property. Use checkboxes as needed for clarity.
  6. Complete Articles Six through Eleven by naming trustees, guardians for minor children, and personal representatives. Ensure all fields are filled accurately.
  7. Review all entries carefully before printing. Sign the document in front of two witnesses to finalize it.

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Witnesses: A Wyoming will must be signed by at least two witnesses, who should not also be beneficiaries in the will. Writing: A Wyoming will must be in writing. Beneficiaries: A testator can leave property to anyone.
Free Resource for Creating a Will We believe it is so important to plan and get ones financial affairs in order that we have partnered with FreeWill.com so that you can create your will online entirely for free. FreeWill is a secure, online tool that will take you through the will preparation process step by step.
Children in Wyoming Inheritance Law If you have a surviving spouse and descendants, your spouse inherits half of your intestate property and your descendants inherit the other half. If you have children but no spouse, your children will inherit all your intestate property.
Lets add this to the list of weird Wyoming laws that sort of make sense. Its illegal to spit on the walls, floors, or steps of public buildings. Not just rudeillegal. Rest assured that anyone within sight of schools, courthouses, and hospitals is duly protected from the sordid sight of oozing, displaced saliva.
Unlike a spouse, an adult child generally has no legally protected right to inherit a deceased parents property under state intestate succession laws. Some states, like Florida, do offer some protection to minor children. Most states protect adult and minor children from being unintentionally omitted from a will.

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People also ask

A joint will is a single document signed by two people (typically spouses) that serves as the will for both individuals. Mutual wills are separate documents created by two people with reciprocal terms, often with an agreement that the surviving person wont change their will after the first person dies.

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