When someone dies owning property through a life estate, their will cannot change who receives that property. The life estate deed controls the outcome, not the will. This surprises many families who discover that a parent's last wishes, clearly stated in their will, have no power over real estate already transferred through a life estate arrangement.
Understanding how these legal instruments interact prevents confusion, family disputes, and unintended consequences. Many people create life estates without fully grasping that they're making an irrevocable decision about property transfer that no later document can undo.
A life estate splits property ownership into two parts: the life tenant's right to use the property during their lifetime, and the remainderman's right to full ownership after the life tenant dies. The life tenant lives in the home, maintains it, and enjoys all benefits of occupancy. The remainderman waits—they have no current right to occupy or control the property, but they hold a guaranteed future interest.
The mechanics work through a special deed. When someone creates a life estate, they execute a life estate deed that names themselves (or another person) as life tenant and designates one or more remaindermen. Once recorded, this deed immediately transfers the future interest to the remainderman. The life tenant retains possession and control during their life, but the remainderman already owns their share—they just c...