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So I've been thinking about something that doesn't get talked about enough - what actually happens to your stuff if you're not married and something happens to you. Like, do you even know who is your next of kin if you are not married? Most people don't, and it's kind of a big deal.
Here's the thing: if you die without a will, the law basically decides for you. And it's not always what you'd want. The default order usually goes kids first, then parents, then siblings. But here's where it gets messy - if you're single with no kids, your parents inherit by default. What if you're estranged from them? What if you have a long-term partner who's been with you for years? Legally, they get nothing unless you specifically put them in writing.
I realized this matters even more for people in non-traditional family situations. Half-siblings, step-relatives, close friends - the law doesn't really recognize those bonds the way you might. And if you're wondering who is your next of kin if you are not married, the answer depends entirely on your location and family structure.
The good news is you can actually control this. You don't have to leave it up to state inheritance laws. A will lets you name whoever you want - family, friends, charities, doesn't matter. Living trusts work too and they skip probate entirely, which saves your beneficiaries a lot of headache. And for retirement accounts or life insurance, you can name specific people directly through beneficiary designations.
I think the biggest mistake single people make is assuming they don't need an estate plan. Wrong. That's exactly when you need one most. Without it, you're basically letting the government decide who is your next of kin if you are not married, and they're gonna follow the rulebook, not your heart.
If you've got assets you care about or people you want to take care of, it's worth spending a few hours getting this sorted. Could be the most important thing you do for the people you actually care about.