Your Spouse Cannot Cut You Out Of The Estate In North Carolina
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Someone can write “my spouse gets nothing” into a will, but North Carolina law may have the final say. We sit down to unpack the North Carolina elective share, the statute that helps protect surviving spouses from being disinherited unless they have signed a valid written waiver. If you are dealing with estate planning, probate, or a tough family situation after a death, this conversation clarifies what rights may exist even when the paperwork looks final.
We walk through how the elective share amount is tied to the length of the marriage, with percentage tiers that rise over time. We also explain why the term “net estate” matters so much, because the calculation can reach beyond probate assets and may include items like life insurance and payable on death designations. That detail is often the moment people realize their assumptions about “keeping things out of the estate” do not always hold up under North Carolina elective share rules.
We also talk about the marital home, where the stakes feel immediate. If a surviving spouse is not on the deed, the shock can be real, and we discuss the option to elect a life estate in the marital home instead of taking the percentage share. Finally, we highlight the practical urgency: the surviving spouse generally has only six months from the date the estate is opened to file the elective share, a short window during an already stressful time.
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