What Happens If My Spouse Remarries?

When you leave everything outright to your spouse, you lose the ability to direct where those assets eventually go. If your spouse remarries, the inheritance you built may flow to a new family — unless your plan is structured to prevent that.

What you should know

  • An outright bequest gives your surviving spouse full legal ownership — including the right to spend, commingle, or redirect to a new spouse or new family.
  • A QTIP trust provides all income to your surviving spouse for life, while preserving the principal for your named beneficiaries, regardless of remarriage.
  • Assets in a QTIP trust cannot be retitled jointly with a new spouse, commingled into joint accounts, or shifted by the new spouse’s influence.
  • The QTIP qualifies for the unlimited marital deduction, so no federal estate tax is owed at the first death — the same tax outcome as an outright bequest.
  • The remarriage concern is not only for blended families. First-marriage couples face the same dynamic — an outright inheritance can drift to unintended heirs over time.

Outright or QTIP — which fits your plan if your spouse remarries?

Five short choices. Brent reads your answer back to you at the end.

A 30-second guided quiz. Get a personal read on whether a QTIP fits.

Talk with Brent about what your current plan would actually do if your spouse outlives you and life later changes.