ChatterBank3 mins ago
Estate planning and second marriage....
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The legal situation is that regardless of any will she is entitled to 'reasonable' provision if she is financially dependent on her husband - and it sounds as though she is.
What 'reasonable' provision is is another matter. One way of approaching it would be to look at how things would be divided up if there were no will. This is intended to represent an average of what people who make wills actually do (personally I doubt if it really does). She would get personal possesions, the house (if it was a joint tenancy), �125,000 plus a life interest in half of what was left.
The other point to consider is Inheritance Tax - a lot of financial advisory firms run free seminars on this and it would be worth attending one.
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