Second marriages and stepchildren are common in Palm Beach, where many residents relocate, remarry, and blend households later in life. Florida law, however, was not written with blended families in mind, and the default rules can quietly override your wishes. Here are the mistakes that most often divide blended families, and how to avoid them.
Mistake 1: Assuming a simple will protects everyone
A common plan is “everything to my spouse, then to all the kids.” The problem: once your assets pass to your surviving spouse, that spouse can rewrite their own plan and leave your children out entirely. Nothing in a basic will under section 732.502 forces a survivor to honor your intentions for your biological kids. A revocable trust under Chapter 736 can instead provide for your spouse during life while preserving the remainder for your children.
Mistake 2: Overlooking the Florida elective share
You cannot fully disinherit a spouse in Florida. Under section 732.2065 and following, a surviving spouse is entitled to an elective share of roughly 30% of the elective estate, which includes far more than probate assets. Blended-family plans that try to give everything to children often get partially unwound when the surviving spouse elects. A properly drafted plan, or a marital agreement, accounts for this in advance.
Mistake 3: Misunderstanding the homestead
Your Palm Beach home is protected by Florida’s homestead provisions (Article X, Section 4), and those rules are unforgiving in blended families. If you leave your homestead to your children but have a surviving spouse, the law may give the spouse a life estate or a one-half tenancy in common instead, regardless of what your will says. This frequently traps stepparents and stepchildren in shared ownership of a home neither wanted. Decisions about the residence need deliberate planning, sometimes through a trust or an enhanced life estate (Lady Bird) deed.
Mistake 4: Leaving outdated beneficiary designations
Retirement accounts and life insurance pass by beneficiary form, not by your will or trust. After a remarriage, an ex-spouse or only the children from a first marriage may still be named. Florida has a statute that can revoke an ex-spouse designation in some cases, but it does not cover every account, and relying on it is risky. Review every beneficiary form after any marriage or divorce.
Mistake 5: Naming the new spouse and the kids as co-trustees
Putting a surviving spouse and adult children from a prior marriage in charge together often guarantees conflict. Consider a neutral successor trustee, or a professional fiduciary, to administer assets fairly and keep the family out of a Palm Beach County courtroom.
Mistake 6: Ignoring incapacity documents
A durable power of attorney under Chapter 709 and a designation of health care surrogate determine who acts for you if you cannot. In blended families, an outdated document can place these decisions with the wrong person. Update them alongside your will and trust.
A note before you act
Blended-family planning is where Florida’s homestead, elective-share, and probate rules collide most sharply. Generic templates routinely backfire here. Speak with a licensed Florida estate planning attorney who can balance your spouse’s rights with your children’s inheritance in a way that holds up.
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