Most people in a second marriage or blended family situation want two things:
- take care of the person they are now in a relationship with, and
- provide for their children from a prior relationship.
Both goals are completely reasonable. Most families we talk to are trying to do exactly that.
Making both happen usually doesn’t come down to one document. It comes down to intentional coordination.
Not a reader? We get it. Watch the video instead.
How Accidental Disinheritance Happens
When everything is jointly owned with a new spouse, or when all beneficiary designations point to the surviving spouse, something unexpected can happen:
The children of the first parent to die may receive nothing – even if the Last Will mentions them by name.
Because by the time the Will takes effect, there may be nothing left for it to control.
Children from a first marriage found that everything went automatically to a new spouse — even though the Will mentioned them. The beneficiary designations and joint ownership structures had already directed every asset before the will had any say.
This is accidental disinheritance. It is more common than most families realize, and it is almost never what anyone intended.

Beneficiary forms are often the deciding factor in these situations. Here is what to look at and why it matters.
The Layer Nobody Talks About
There is also something harder to address: personal property.
Jewelry. Heirlooms. A wedding ring from a first marriage. These things carry meaning that no dollar amount captures.
Legal title does not account for emotional significance. If ownership says one thing and the family expected something different, those conversations can become painful and unresolvable in ways that last for years.

If you want the full picture of why coordination matters — not just for blended families, but for any estate plan — this is a good place to start.
What Intentional Coordination Looks Like
Good planning starts with a clear picture of everything. Joint accounts, beneficiary forms, real estate titles, trust if they exist.
Then a simple but important question: do these documents work together to accomplish both goals? Or do they work against each other?
That is not always a simple question. But it is the right one to ask while you have the ability to fix it.
If you are part of a blended family situation and have not had a real conversation about how your plan is structured, that is worth doing, and it is exactly the kind of conversation we help families have every day.
CCSK Law | (219) 230-3600 | CCSKInfo.com
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Reading this content does not create an attorney-client relationship with CCSK Law. For advice specific to your situation, please consult an attorney.
Read more at The Will is not Enough


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