The figures on this page are general estimates. Laws, fees, thresholds, and prices differ by state and change often, and your own situation may change the result. Before you act, confirm the current numbers and rules for Louisiana with a licensed professional — an attorney, tax advisor, or licensed agent as appropriate. Reading this page does not create a professional relationship.
How intestacy works in Louisiana
When someone dies in Louisiana without a valid will, La. Civ. Code art. 880 et seq. (arts. 888–902) decides who inherits. The statute orders potential heirs by their relationship to the deceased — spouse and children first, then parents, then more distant relatives — and specifies exactly what share each one receives.
Louisiana is a community property state. On intestacy the decedent's one-half of community property passes to the descendants subject to the surviving spouse's usufruct (arts. 888, 890), or to the surviving spouse outright if there are no descendants (art. 889). Separate property follows the blood-relative scheme — descendants, then siblings/parents, then spouse (arts. 891–894).
What happens when there’s a surviving spouse only (no children, no parents)
With no descendants, no parents, and no siblings surviving, the spouse takes the community property (art. 889) and also succeeds to the separate property (art. 894) — effectively the entire estate.
What happens when there’s a surviving spouse and children
This is the most common situation and where Louisiana’s rules get specific:
Community property: the decedent's one-half passes to the children, but the surviving spouse receives a usufruct (life-use, ending at the spouse's death or remarriage) over it (arts. 888, 890). Separate property: passes to the children outright, with no spousal usufruct (art. 888). The spouse takes no ownership when there are children — only the usufruct over the decedent's community share.
For families where everyone is from the same marriage, the spouse generally gets a meaningful share. For blended families — where one or more children are from a prior relationship — many states change the math substantially. If your situation might fit that, the section above is exactly the rule that applies.
What happens when there’s a surviving spouse and parents (no children)
With no descendants, the surviving spouse takes all of the community property (art. 889). The decedent's separate property goes to the surviving parents (art. 892), or — if siblings also survive — to the siblings subject to a usufruct in favor of the parents (art. 891).
What happens when there are children but no spouse
The children take the entire estate — both community and separate property — in equal shares by heads, with a deceased child's share passing to that child's descendants by representation (art. 888).
What happens when there’s no spouse and no children
Order after descendants: with no descendants, community property goes to the surviving spouse (art. 889) and separate property to siblings and/or parents (arts. 891–892); then to the surviving spouse if no descendants, parents, or siblings (art. 894); then to more remote ascendants and collaterals (art. 896); and finally, if no heirs, the estate escheats to the state (art. 902).
This is where intestacy starts producing results that often surprise people — distant relatives the deceased may not have been close to can end up inheriting, and a long-time unmarried partner inherits nothing.
A Louisiana-specific quirk
Louisiana is the only U.S. state with forced heirship (La. Civ. Code arts. 1493, 1495): even with a will, children who are 23 or younger — or descendants of any age who are permanently incapacitated — are 'forced heirs' entitled to a forced portion (one-fourth of the estate for one forced heir, one-half for two or more) that generally cannot be given away. The surviving spouse's legal usufruct over community property (art. 890) is another civil-law feature unique to Louisiana.
What intestacy can’t do (and why it usually fails most people)
Even when Louisiana’s intestacy rules produce a result close to what someone would have chosen, the rules can never:
- Leave anything to an unmarried partner — intestacy doesn’t recognize unmarried partners regardless of relationship length
- Leave anything to a step-child you didn’t formally adopt
- Leave anything to a friend, charity, or specific person outside your family
- Name a guardian for your minor children — a Louisiana judge picks
- Specify who handles your estate — a court appoints an administrator
- Identify specific items for specific people
- Account for blended-family dynamics in nuanced ways
- Reduce probate costs and time — intestate estates still go through full probate
For most Louisiana families, a basic will — costing $300 to $1,500 with a local attorney, or $50 to $300 with an online service — is meaningfully better than the default rules.
What probate looks like in Louisiana when there’s no will
If someone dies intestate in Louisiana, the estate still goes through probate. A court appoints an administrator (rather than an “executor” — the title is different for intestacy) to:
- Inventory the estate’s assets
- Notify creditors and pay debts
- Identify legal heirs under Louisiana’s intestacy statute
- Distribute remaining assets to heirs according to the statute
For details on what probate costs and how long it takes in Louisiana, see:
- How Much Does Probate Cost in Louisiana?
- How Long Does Probate Take in Louisiana?
- How to Avoid Probate in Louisiana
What to do this week if you don’t have a will
The most useful single move for any Louisiana adult without a will:
- Write a basic will. Either through an online service ($50-$300) or a local attorney ($300-$1,500). Name an executor, name a guardian for any minor children, and specify who inherits what.
- Update beneficiary designations on retirement accounts, life insurance, and POD/TOD bank accounts. These pass outside both the will and intestacy.
- Sign a financial power of attorney and a healthcare directive. These handle incapacity (not death) and prevent your family from needing court-appointed guardianship.
For a Louisiana family with a typical estate, this whole package usually costs under $1,500 and takes a couple of weeks of intermittent work. It’s substantially cheaper and less stressful than what happens if you don’t do it.
What happens without a will in other states
Intestacy rules differ from state to state — here’s what happens when someone dies without a will elsewhere:
- What Happens If You Die Without a Will in California?
- What Happens If You Die Without a Will in Texas?
- What Happens If You Die Without a Will in Florida?
- What Happens If You Die Without a Will in New York?
- What Happens If You Die Without a Will in Pennsylvania?
- What Happens If You Die Without a Will in Illinois?
- What Happens If You Die Without a Will in Ohio?
- What Happens If You Die Without a Will in Georgia?
- What Happens If You Die Without a Will in North Carolina?
- What Happens If You Die Without a Will in Michigan?
- What Happens If You Die Without a Will in Alabama?
- What Happens If You Die Without a Will in Alaska?
- What Happens If You Die Without a Will in Arizona?
- What Happens If You Die Without a Will in Arkansas?
- What Happens If You Die Without a Will in Colorado?
- What Happens If You Die Without a Will in Connecticut?
- What Happens If You Die Without a Will in Delaware?
- What Happens If You Die Without a Will in Hawaii?
- What Happens If You Die Without a Will in Idaho?
- What Happens If You Die Without a Will in Indiana?
- What Happens If You Die Without a Will in Iowa?
- What Happens If You Die Without a Will in Kansas?
- What Happens If You Die Without a Will in Kentucky?
- What Happens If You Die Without a Will in Maine?
- What Happens If You Die Without a Will in Maryland?
- What Happens If You Die Without a Will in Massachusetts?
- What Happens If You Die Without a Will in Minnesota?
- What Happens If You Die Without a Will in Mississippi?
- What Happens If You Die Without a Will in Missouri?
- What Happens If You Die Without a Will in Montana?
- What Happens If You Die Without a Will in Nebraska?
- What Happens If You Die Without a Will in Nevada?
- What Happens If You Die Without a Will in New Hampshire?
- What Happens If You Die Without a Will in New Jersey?
- What Happens If You Die Without a Will in New Mexico?
- What Happens If You Die Without a Will in North Dakota?
- What Happens If You Die Without a Will in Oklahoma?
- What Happens If You Die Without a Will in Oregon?
- What Happens If You Die Without a Will in Rhode Island?
- What Happens If You Die Without a Will in South Carolina?
- What Happens If You Die Without a Will in South Dakota?
- What Happens If You Die Without a Will in Tennessee?
- What Happens If You Die Without a Will in Utah?
- What Happens If You Die Without a Will in Vermont?
- What Happens If You Die Without a Will in Virginia?
- What Happens If You Die Without a Will in Washington?
- What Happens If You Die Without a Will in West Virginia?
- What Happens If You Die Without a Will in Wisconsin?
- What Happens If You Die Without a Will in Wyoming?
Related reading
- Do I Need a Will? — the honest decision
- How to Write a Will (and What Makes It Valid)
- What Is Probate?
- How to Avoid Probate
- Estate Planning Checklist
- Beneficiary Designations
- Power of Attorney Explained
This page explains Louisiana intestacy law in general terms as of 2026. It is not legal advice; intestacy provisions, dollar thresholds, and statute citations can change. Confirm current rules with a licensed Louisiana attorney before relying on this page. Sources: La. Civ. Code art. 888 (devolution to descendants), La. Civ. Code art. 889 (community property to surviving spouse), La. Civ. Code art. 890 (surviving spouse's usufruct), La. Civ. Code art. 891 (separate property; parents and siblings), La. Civ. Code art. 1493 (forced heirs).