Navigating Estate Plan Changes After the Death of a Spouse

Losing a spouse is one of life’s most difficult experiences, bringing both emotional and practical challenges. While it is essential to allow time to grieve, surviving spouses must also confront important legal and financial matters. Among the most pressing is the need to review and revise estate planning documents. Updating your plan ensures that it reflects your present circumstances and continues to protect your family. The Indianapolis attorneys at Frank & Kraft explain key steps that you should consider taking after the death of a spouse.

  1. Review Existing Documents. A careful first step is to gather your own estate planning records along with those belonging to your late spouse. These may include Last Wills, trusts, advance directives, and powers of attorney, as well as beneficiary designations for retirement accounts or life insurance policies. Reading through these materials provides clarity about what must be done to settle your spouse’s estate while also highlighting changes needed in your own documents. Provisions naming your spouse as Executor, Trustee, or primary beneficiary are no longer effective and must be addressed.
  2. Update Beneficiary Designations. Spouses are often listed as the first beneficiary on life insurance policies, retirement accounts, and bank accounts. Once a spouse has died, those designations are outdated. Leaving them unchanged can create unintended results, such as funds being transferred to the deceased spouse’s estate and passing through probate. It is wise to select new beneficiaries promptly and to coordinate these updates with guidance from an attorney to ensure all accounts and documents remain consistent.
  3. Revise Your Will and/or Trust. Couples often create coordinated or reciprocal estate plans that reflect shared goals. After a spouse’s death, those plans usually need to be reshaped. This may involve revising distributions, naming different beneficiaries, or appointing new fiduciaries. References to a deceased spouse as guardian, Trustee, or co-fiduciary must be replaced. In some cases, establishing a new trust structure that reflects a changed financial picture or family situation may be advisable. Making these revisions while you are capable of expressing your wishes helps ensure your intentions are honored.
  4. Update Powers of Attorney. A durable power of attorney authorizes someone to act for you in financial matters if you become incapacitated, while a health care power of attorney appoints an agent to make medical decisions on your behalf. If your spouse was named in either role, those appointments are now void. Choosing a new agent is essential. Select someone you trust who is capable of handling serious responsibilities. Without an updated power of attorney in Indiana, a court may need to step in and appoint a guardian, which can be costly and time-consuming.
  5. Review Guardianship for Minor Children. When children are still minors, guardianship provisions must be reconsidered after the death of one parent. Many estate plans name the surviving spouse as the guardian of choice. With that option gone, you must carefully choose another trusted individual to raise your children if something happens to you. Have an open discussion with the person you wish to name, secure their consent, and update your Will to legally confirm the new designation.
  6. Revise Advance Directives. Health care directives ensure that your medical treatment preferences are respected if you cannot speak for yourself. If your spouse was previously designated as your health care proxy, you need to appoint a new surrogate. Indiana law permits residents to name a health care representative to make medical decisions, and this document can specify the treatments you wish to accept or decline. Make sure the directive is properly signed, witnessed, and stored where it can be accessed quickly during a medical emergency.
  7. Update Titles. Property owned jointly by married couples in Indiana typically passes automatically to the surviving spouse by law. Even so, records should be updated to reflect sole ownership. Assets owned only by the deceased spouse may need to go through probate. If no Will exists, Indiana’s intestacy laws will determine who inherits. This process underscores the importance of reviewing property titles and considering whether shifting ownership to a revocable living trust would simplify future administration.

Can We Help You with the Steps You Need to Take Following the Death of a Spouse?

For more information, please join us for an upcoming FREE seminar. If you have additional questions or concerns about the steps you should take following the death of a spouse, contact an experienced Indianapolis estate planning attorney at Frank & Kraft by calling (317) 684-1100 to schedule an appointment.

The post Navigating Estate Plan Changes After the Death of a Spouse appeared first on Frank & Kraft, Attorneys at Law.

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By: Paul A. Kraft, Estate Planning Attorney
Title: Navigating Estate Plan Changes After the Death of a Spouse
Sourced From: frankkraft.com/navigating-estate-plan-changes-after-the-death-of-a-spouse/
Published Date: Thu, 16 Oct 2025 17:30:00 +0000


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