North Dakota · Estate Law

North Dakota intestacy gives the spouse the entire estate when descendants are mutual

North Dakota Century Code — Share of Spouse

N.D. Cent. Code § 30.1-04-02

What the rule says

North Dakota's intestacy framework follows the Uniform Probate Code. Under N.D. Cent. Code § 30.1-04-02:

- Spouse and all descendants are mutual: The spouse takes the entire estate. - Spouse and at least one descendant from prior relationship of decedent: The spouse takes the first $150,000 plus one-half of the balance. - Spouse and at least one descendant from prior relationship of spouse (not decedent's child): The spouse takes the first $150,000 plus one-half of the balance. - Spouse but no descendants: The spouse takes the entire estate. - Descendants but no spouse: Descendants take the entire estate by representation.

What this means in practice

- ND resident dies without a will, leaving spouse and three mutual children. Estate $400,000. Spouse takes the entire $400,000. - ND resident dies without a will, leaving spouse and one child from prior relationship. Estate $400,000. Spouse takes $150,000 + 50% of $250,000 = $275,000. Child takes $125,000.

What you can do about it

- ND will requirements (N.D. Cent. Code § 30.1-08-02). A will must be in writing, signed by the testator, and signed by two witnesses. - ND recognizes harmless-error doctrine under § 30.1-08-03. - ND recognizes holographic wills under § 30.1-08-02(2). - Self-proving affidavits are recognized. - Beneficiary designations override intestacy. - Spousal election. Under N.D. Cent. Code § 30.1-05-01, surviving spouse can elect against the will.

Who this affects most

North Dakota's intestacy formula is most consequential for married ND residents in mutual-descendants families and blended families with the $150,000 floor.

Verified April 29, 2026. View the statute at North Dakota Legislative Branch.

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This information is educational, not legal advice. For complex situations, consult a licensed North Dakota attorney.