How Do I Use a Life Estate for a Spouse and Church?

Planning for the future — especially when it involves protecting a spouse while supporting a cause you care about — is a generous and thoughtful move. Given your specific situation, you are looking for a legal arrangement that balances a life estate with a charitable remainder.

Here is how you can structure your will to ensure your husband is taken care of and your home eventually supports your church.

1. Create a Life Estate for Your Husband

The most effective way to handle the house is to grant your husband a life estate in your will.

  • How it works: You “leave” the house to your husband for the duration of his life. He becomes the “life tenant.” He has the right to live there, but he does not “own” the property in a way that allows him to sell it or leave it to someone else in his own will.
  • The remainder interest: You designate your church as the remainder beneficiary. This means the moment your husband passes away, ownership automatically transfers to the church without the need for further legal battles.

2. Set Up a “Maintenance Trust” or Dedicated Fund

To ensure he can actually afford to stay there, you can establish a testamentary trust within your will.

You set aside a specific sum of money (e.g., $50,000 or $100,000) into a trust.

The trust documents will state that the money is to be used exclusively for property taxes, homeowners insurance, and major repairs (like a new roof).

You can specify that if any money is left in this account when your husband passes, that balance also goes to the church.

3. Addressing the “Pretermitted Heir” (Your Child)

Since you have a child you haven't spoken to in 25 years, you need to be very intentional. In many states, if a child is not mentioned in a will, they can claim they were “forgotten” and challenge the will to receive a legal share.

  • Explicit disinheritance. You should specifically mention your child by name in the will. You don’t need to be unkind, but you must state that you are intentionally leaving them nothing (or a nominal amount) to prove it wasn’t an oversight.
  • No-contest clause. You can include a clause stating that if anyone challenges the will and loses, they forfeit any right to any part of the estate.