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How to Protect Your Inheritance From Your Child’s Divorce in NJ

protect inheritance from divorce NJ

You spent decades building your wealth. You saved, invested, sacrificed, and planned — all so your children would have a better life.

Now imagine this: your child gets divorced, and half of what you left them walks out the door with their ex-spouse.

It happens more often than you think. And in many cases, it is entirely preventable.

If you are a parent in New Jersey who wants to make sure your hard-earned legacy stays in your family, you need to understand how divorce can threaten your child’s inheritance — and what you can do about it right now.

How a Child’s Divorce Can Swallow Your Legacy

Here is the reality most parents do not consider when they are creating their estate plan.

Under New Jersey law, inherited assets are generally considered separate property, meaning they are not subject to equitable distribution in a divorce. That sounds like good news.

But there is a major exception: commingling.

The moment your child mixes their inheritance with marital assets, the protection disappears. And it happens more easily than you would expect.

For example:

  • Your daughter inherits $300,000 and deposits it into a joint bank account with her spouse. That money is now marital property.
  • Your son uses his inheritance to pay off the mortgage on a home he owns with his wife. The court may now consider those funds part of the marital estate.
  • Your child uses inherited funds for family vacations, home renovations, or everyday expenses. A judge could rule those assets have been commingled.

Once commingling happens, it is extremely difficult to trace the inherited funds back to their original source. The inheritance you worked a lifetime to build could be divided by a family court judge who has never met you.

Why Leaving Assets Outright Is Risky

Most parents default to the simplest estate plan: leave everything to their children outright. It feels generous and straightforward.

But an outright inheritance offers zero protection from a child’s divorce.

The moment your child receives the inheritance, it belongs to them completely. There is no legal barrier preventing them from depositing it into a joint account, spending it on marital expenses, or losing it in a divorce settlement.

Even if your child has the best intentions, life is unpredictable. A marriage that seems solid today could fall apart five or ten years from now. And by then, the inheritance may have already been absorbed into marital assets that the court will divide.

This is not about trusting your child or their spouse. It is about protecting your family from situations that nobody sees coming.

The Trust Solution: How to Keep Your Legacy in Your Family

The most effective way to protect your child’s inheritance from divorce is to leave it in a trust rather than giving it to them outright.

A properly designed trust keeps the inherited assets separate from your child’s marital property by default. Because your child never “owns” the assets directly, those assets are generally not subject to equitable distribution in a divorce.

Here are the types of trusts that provide the strongest protection.

Spendthrift Trust

Under N.J.S.A. 3B:31-36, a spendthrift trust restricts a beneficiary’s ability to transfer or assign their interest in the trust. This means your child’s ex-spouse and creditors cannot reach the trust assets.

A spendthrift provision is one of the most powerful tools in New Jersey estate planning. It keeps the assets under the trustee’s control and out of reach of anyone who might try to claim them.

Discretionary Trust

A discretionary trust gives the trustee — not your child — the authority to decide when and how distributions are made. Because your child does not have an automatic right to receive trust funds, those funds are far more difficult for a divorcing spouse to claim.

Under N.J.S.A. 3B:31-38, New Jersey law provides that a beneficiary’s interest in a discretionary trust is generally not subject to the claims of a spouse or creditor.

Dynasty Trust

New Jersey has abolished the Rule Against Perpetuities for certain trusts, which means a dynasty trust can protect your family’s wealth across multiple generations. This is not just for the ultra-wealthy. Any family that wants to preserve assets for grandchildren and beyond should consider this option.

A dynasty trust protects against divorce, creditors, and even estate taxes as wealth passes from one generation to the next.

What Your Trust Must Include

Not all trusts offer the same level of protection. If you want your child’s inheritance to be divorce-proof, your trust document must be carefully drafted with specific provisions.

A spendthrift clause prevents your child from voluntarily or involuntarily transferring their interest in the trust. Without this clause, a divorcing spouse may have a stronger argument for accessing trust assets.

Trustee discretion language ensures the trustee — not your child — controls when distributions happen. The less control your child has over the funds, the harder it is for anyone else to claim them.

Clear distribution guidelines spell out the circumstances under which the trustee can make distributions, such as for health, education, maintenance, and support. This keeps the trust’s purpose focused and reduces the risk of a court treating it as your child’s personal asset.

An independent trustee adds another layer of protection. When your child serves as their own trustee, courts may argue they have enough control over the trust to make it subject to equitable distribution. Naming an independent trustee or co-trustee avoids this problem.

Do Not Forget About Alimony and Child Support

Even when inherited assets are kept separate and protected in a trust, New Jersey courts can still consider them when calculating alimony and child support obligations.

Under N.J.S.A. 2A:34-23, the court examines the financial circumstances of both parties, including income from trusts. While the trust principal may be protected from division, the income it generates could be factored into support calculations.

This is an important nuance that your estate planning attorney should address when designing your trust.

Steps You Can Take Today

Protecting your child’s inheritance does not require a complete overhaul of your estate plan. But it does require action.

Review your current plan. If your Will leaves assets outright to your children, consider restructuring those gifts into a trust.

Talk to your children. Encourage them to keep any inherited assets separate from marital property. If they have not already, suggest they discuss a prenuptial or postnuptial agreement with their spouse.

Choose the right trustee. The person you select to manage the trust plays a critical role in protecting the assets. Consider a trusted family member, a professional fiduciary, or a combination of both.

Work with an experienced attorney. Trust drafting is not something you want to leave to a template or an online service. The language in your trust document determines whether your child’s inheritance is protected or exposed.

Your Legacy Deserves Protection

You did not work this hard just to watch your legacy end up in the hands of someone you never intended to receive it.

With the right estate plan, you can provide for your children, support their families, and ensure that what you built stays where it belongs — in your family.

The Simone Law Firm helps New Jersey and Pennsylvania families protect their wealth across generations. We understand the unique challenges that come with preserving a legacy, and we will help you create a plan that gives you confidence and peace of mind.

Contact us today to schedule a consultation. Your family’s future is worth protecting.

Author Bio

michael s. simone, esq.

Michael Simone is the Founder and Managing Partner of the Simone Law Firm, an estate planning law firm in Cinnaminson, NJ. With more than 20 years of experience in criminal defense, he has represented clients in a wide range of legal matters, including estate planning, elder law, probate, real estate, and business law.

Michael received his Juris Doctor from the Rutgers University School of Law and is a member of the New Jersey Bar Association.

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