Legal Last Will and Testament Form for Divorced Person Not Remarried with No Children - Kentucky 2025

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Kentucky law requires your living will directive to be witnessed by two adults or notarized. Neither the witnesses nor the notary public may be your blood relative, your physician or anyone directly responsible for financing your health care.
The will must be in writing, signed by the testator or by someone else at the testators direction and in their presence. It must also be signed by at least two witnesses. The will must be notarized.
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.
The Spouses Share in Kentucky In Kentucky, if you die without a will, your spouse will inherit property from you under a law called dower and curtesy. Usually, this means that your spouse inherits 1/2 of your intestate property. The rest of your property passes to your descendants, parents, or siblings.
Signature: The will must be signed by the testator or by another person under his direction and in his presence. Witnesses: If the will is not wholly written by the testator, two witnesses must sign the will in the presence of the testator after the testator signs or acknowledges the will in their presence.

People also ask

The testators marriage does not revoke a prior made will. KRS 394.090.
A handwritten will is only acceptable in Kentucky if the testator writes their entire will in their handwriting, sign, and date their will in front of two witnesses. A handwritten will without witnesses is not valid. Oral Will: An oral or spoken will, sometimes called a nuncupative will, is not valid in Kentucky.

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