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Your parent has made the difficult decision of disinheriting your sibling from their estate plan. While this decision will undoubtedly land heavily on your sibling, the decision also places you in a complicated position.
As the child who was not cut out of the estate plan, you may find yourself in an especially delicate spot, particularly if your parent named you as the executor (also called a personal representative) or trustee in their estate plan. You may feel torn between emotionally supporting your sibling as they process this news and honoring your parent’s wishes, which you may also be legally required to uphold.
Balancing empathy, family dynamics, and legal responsibilities is hard under the best circumstances. After a parent’s death, when emotions are raw and long-standing tensions bubble to the surface, disinheritance can create an explosive environment that may force you onto a narrow tightrope between family loyalty and fiduciary responsibility.
One wrong step—an ill-timed comment, a perceived slight, or a poorly phrased text or email—can deepen resentment or even spark litigation. Knowing what you can manage on your own and when it is wiser to bring in a professional is part of the delicate balancing act.
For some, an inheritance feels like a birthright. Many people assume that part of their financial future will come from family wealth, and they may treat it as an anticipated windfall that will eventually provide stability or opportunity. However, the reality of receiving, or not receiving, an inheritance is often far more complicated.
A 2025 study by Northwestern Mutual found that 20 percent of adult children expect to receive an inheritance,[1] with the average expected amount being nearly $335,000 according to a Choice Mutual survey.[2] More than half of adults view the expected inheritance as “critical” to their long-term financial security.[3] Nearly half of younger adults (ages 18 to 27) rely on financial help from their parents, and many lack savings and delay major life milestones such as homeownership and investing.[4] Despite these expectations, only 31 percent of Americans say they plan to leave an inheritance.[5]
Of the younger adults who expect an inheritance, most say they would save or invest the money. Others say they plan to use it for housing costs, debt repayment, or support for their own children.[6] These expectations shape financial behavior in measurable ways:
These expectations are not merely wishful thinking. Sixty-one percent say they have either spoken directly with their parents about an expected inheritance or have seen their parents’ will or trust.[8]
The shock of disinheritance is magnified when expectations do not match reality and the anticipated inheritance never materializes. Given how many young adults rely on the idea of a future inheritance, being cut out can feel like a financial and emotional double gut punch.
More than half of young adults surveyed by Choice Mutual believe they will one day be financially responsible for caring for their aging parents.[9] Many may implicitly view an inheritance as part of the “deal,” or a kind of tradeoff, for that anticipated support.
However, adult children are not legally entitled to an inheritance from their parents. An inheritance is a gift, not a right. Unlike spouses (who, in many states (such as Florida), have statutory rights) or minor children (who are often entitled to financial support until adulthood), adult children generally have no automatic claim to their parents’ estate.
A parent may disinherit an adult child for almost any reason, provided that the decision is voluntary, made with full mental capacity, and formalized with properly executed, legally valid documents.
The decision to disinherit a child is often rooted in complex family history and is rarely simple or purely punitive. However, while a parent does not need to provide a specific reason, simply failing to mention the child in an estate plan is generally not enough to disinherit them: A parent must clearly state in their estate plan that a child is being intentionally excluded. Otherwise, the child may later claim that the omission was accidental (a pretermitted heir[10] situation) or may inherit under state intestacy rules if no estate plan exists.
However, even when every legal requirement has been met, careful planning may do little to protect the sibling(s) left in the middle from the emotional and relational fallout—as well as the potential legal ramifications—that may come afterward.
When a parent disinherits a child, the impact is rarely confined to the person who was cut out. It can reshape the entire family dynamic, placing the remaining siblings, particularly those who have been left an inheritance, in a uniquely complicated position.
If you find yourself in this position, you may feel torn between compassion for your sibling and respect for your parent’s autonomy. And if you are a fiduciary (i.e., an executor or trustee), the tension becomes legal as well as emotional. A fiduciary is held to the highest standard of care, meaning that you must act solely in the best legal and financial interest of the estate or trust beneficiaries while faithfully following your parent’s written instructions.
As the executor or trustee, you may even be the one who ends up breaking the news to your disinherited sibling. As a sibling, you may also feel pressure to clear the air about your parent’s decision—to offer what little context you have to reassure them that you were not part of the decision or simply to soften the sting where you can.
Some families favor transparency. Discussing the disinheritance while the parent is alive can reduce later shock and demonstrate that the decision was voluntary, which may be helpful and admissible evidence if that sibling later decides to contest the estate plan. It is almost always a smart idea for a parent to also notify their appointed executors and trustees ahead of time so that they can prepare for potential issues and understand the parent’s reasoning.
However, early disclosure has real dangers. It can ignite resentment, invite pressure campaigns to change the estate plan, or trigger accusations of undue influence. Where conflict already exists, advance disclosure can escalate the situation long before the estate is ever administered.
Many families choose strategic limited disclosure, ensuring that fiduciaries and professionals know the plan while saving broader explanations for later or documenting them instead.
Families often avoid discussing disinheritance to prevent conflict during a parent’s lifetime. However, avoiding the conversation can create confusion and give rise to later disputes. As a sibling who remains included in the estate plan, especially if you are named as a fiduciary, your role is to support your parent in creating clear, updated documents and maintaining evidence that demonstrates their intent, capacity, and independent decision-making. This proactive approach helps reduce uncertainty and strengthens the estate against potential challenges by the disinherited sibling.
Use explicit, unambiguous language. Disinheritance must be clearly Naming the child and documenting the parent’s decision removes any argument that the omission was accidental or the result of a drafting oversight.Above all, keeping the plan current is paramount. Outdated documents often create accidental rights or revive old ones, which can open the door to contests. Regular updates are recommended every three to five years or sooner if a major life event such as divorce, estrangement, reconciliation, the birth of grandchildren, or remarriage occurs.
Disinheritance is not a binary choice. Estate planning offers ways to protect assets, express values, and set boundaries without completely severing ties.
Ultimately, your role as an inheriting sibling is not to decide what your parent wants but to help ensure that whatever they decide is legally sound, voluntary, and clearly documented. That could entail nudging them toward an estate planning attorney, encouraging objective evaluations (such as capacity assessments), or helping them build a paper trail that demonstrates their independence. It may also mean discussing whether you should serve as executor or trustee at all; in many families, appointing a neutral professional or corporate fiduciary can reduce conflict and spare siblings from being placed in an impossible role.
You may be unable to avoid getting caught in the middle. However, you can help everyone affected by a disinheritance decision by seeking legal guidance that protects intentions, assets, and feelings—and by ensuring that the administration is handled in the way least likely to further fracture the family. These situations are rarely easy to navigate alone. Call our office to speak with an experienced estate planning attorney who can help guide your family through this process with clarity and care.
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