LGBTQ+ Estate Planning Attorney in Orange County, CA

If the law does not automatically recognize your family, you cannot afford to leave your estate plan to chance. For LGBTQ+ families, same-sex couples, registered domestic partners, and unmarried partners in Orange County, estate planning is not optional. It is the primary legal tool you have to protect the people you love and make sure your wishes are honored, regardless of how the law categorizes your relationships.
At AMO LAW, we are an experienced Orange County estate planning attorney team that works with families across the full spectrum of how people build their lives together. We serve same-sex married couples, registered domestic partners, unmarried partners, and multi-partner families throughout Costa Mesa, Irvine, Newport Beach, and the surrounding communities. We do not approach your family as an edge case. We approach it as your family.
California offers some of the strongest legal protections in the country for LGBTQ+ individuals and families. But legal protections and automatic legal recognition are not the same thing. Understanding the difference, and planning around it, is what this work is about.
Estate Planning Attorney in Costa Mesa, CA

What California Law Does and Does Not Protect Automatically

Even with California’s strong protections for LGBTQ+ individuals and families, there are significant gaps that only an estate plan can close.

If you are married or an RDP in California, the law automatically provides:

Community property ownership of assets acquired during the relationship. Intestate inheritance rights if your partner dies without a will. The right to make healthcare decisions in an emergency. Spousal or partner rights in probate proceedings.

The law does NOT automatically provide — for anyone, regardless of relationship status:

Control over how your assets are distributed if you have not named beneficiaries. A named guardian for children if both parents are gone. Protection from probate court for your estate. Healthcare decision authority for an unmarried or unregistered partner. Any inheritance rights for an unmarried partner or chosen family member.
An estate plan closes these gaps deliberately. Without one, the law makes these decisions for you, and it does so without any knowledge of who your people actually are.

Privacy as a Planning Consideration

Not every client we work with is fully out to every person in their life. That is a reality, not a judgment, and it matters in estate planning.
Wills become public record when they go through probate. That means the names of beneficiaries, the nature of relationships, and the structure of your estate become visible to anyone who looks. For a client who is not out to extended family, an employer, or a community, probate can inadvertently disclose information they have chosen to keep private.
A properly funded living trust avoids probate entirely. Because a trust is a private document, it never becomes part of the public record. Your beneficiaries, the structure of your family, and the details of your estate remain confidential. For many of our LGBTQ+ clients and multi-partner families, this is one of the most important practical reasons to choose a trust-based plan over a will alone.
We also recognize that healthcare directives and powers of attorney involve naming people who may have roles in your life that are not visible to everyone. We draft these documents with care and specificity so the people you trust have clear legal authority, without creating documentation that exposes more than you intend.
Confidentiality is a core part of how we work. What you share with us stays with us.

How California Law Recognizes Your Relationship

The legal protections available to you depend significantly on how your relationship is formally recognized under California law. Here is how the main categories work.

Same-Sex Married Couples

Since the Supreme Court’s decision in Obergefell v. Hodges in 2015, same-sex married couples have the same federal and state marriage rights as any other married couple. In California, that means community property rules apply, spousal inheritance rights are automatic under intestate succession law, and you have the same rights to make medical decisions for each other in an emergency. Marriage provides the broadest baseline of legal protection.
That said, marriage alone is not an estate plan. Without a will, trust, or healthcare directive in place, California’s default rules still apply, and those defaults may not reflect your intentions. A same-sex married couple with children from prior relationships, for example, faces the same blended family planning complexity as any other couple.

Registered Domestic Partners (RDP)

California’s Domestic Partner Rights and Responsibilities Act grants registered domestic partners most of the same state-level rights as married spouses, including community property rights, intestate inheritance, and the right to make healthcare decisions. California Family Code Section 297.5 is the governing statute.
The critical distinction is federal recognition. Unlike marriage, registered domestic partnerships are not recognized at the federal level. This has implications for Social Security survivor benefits, federal tax treatment of jointly held assets, and certain retirement account designations. If you are an RDP and not married, your estate plan needs to account for the gap between what California grants you and what federal law does not.

Unmarried Partners

If you and your partner are not married and not registered as domestic partners, California law does not recognize your relationship for inheritance purposes at all. Under California’s intestate succession laws, an unmarried partner inherits nothing if their partner dies without a will or trust. The estate passes to blood relatives, regardless of how long the relationship lasted, how intertwined your finances are, or what your intentions were.
This is one of the most urgent planning situations we encounter. Without a properly drafted estate plan, a surviving unmarried partner can be left with no legal standing, no right to the shared home, and no ability to make decisions during a medical emergency. A will, a trust, a durable power of attorney, and an advance healthcare directive are not optional documents in this situation. They are the only tools that create the legal recognition the relationship itself does not provide.

Families Whose Relationships Fall Outside Standard Legal Categories

California law recognizes marriage and registered domestic partnerships, but many families are built around relationships that fall outside those categories. If your household includes partners, chosen family members, or other people whose roles in your life are not reflected in any legal status, your estate plan is the primary tool for creating legal recognition where the law does not provide it automatically.
A comprehensive plan for this kind of family typically designates the right people for healthcare decisions through an Advance Healthcare Directive, names each person you want to inherit in a will or trust, addresses how shared assets are titled and held, and may include co-habitation or partnership agreements to document the intentions of the household. Working with an attorney who understands your family structure is essential. Generic documents will not accomplish this.

Essential Estate Planning Documents for LGBTQ+ and Non-Traditional Families

Revocable Living Trust

A living trust holds your assets, keeps your estate out of probate, and lets you name exactly who inherits what and under what conditions. For families whose relationships are not automatically recognized by law, a trust is often the most important document in the plan. It keeps your estate private, allows for nuanced distribution, and gives you control over how your assets support the people you love.

Will with Beneficiary Designations

Even with a trust, a will ensures that any assets not captured by the trust are directed according to your wishes rather than intestate law. Beneficiary designations on retirement accounts and life insurance policies are also critical and operate independently of both your will and your trust. These designations need to be reviewed and updated whenever your family structure changes.

Durable Power of Attorney for Finances

A Durable Power of Attorney authorizes the person you designate to manage your financial affairs if you become incapacitated. In California, the durable designation ensures this authority survives your incapacity. For unmarried partners, this document is the only legal basis for a partner to manage shared financial affairs if something happens to you. Without it, a court may need to appoint a conservator, and that conservator may not be the person you would have chosen.

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California Advance Healthcare Directive

California’s Advance Healthcare Directive designates who makes medical decisions on your behalf if you cannot, and documents your wishes about end-of-life care. For LGBTQ+ families and unmarried partners, this document is not administrative. It determines who is in the room, who speaks for you, and whose authority medical providers are legally required to respect. Without it, that authority defaults to next of kin under California’s hierarchy, which may not include your partner at all.

Nomination of Guardian

If you have children and something happens to both parents or both caregivers, a California court will appoint a guardian. Without a formal nomination, the court makes this decision without knowing your family. A guardian nomination, included in your will or as a standalone document, puts your preferences on record. For families where a co-parent does not have a legal parental relationship to the child, this document is especially important.

What Happens Without a Plan in California

California’s intestate succession laws follow a fixed order of priority: surviving spouse or registered domestic partner, then children, then parents, then siblings, and outward from there. If none of those apply, the estate escheats to the state.
For unmarried partners and multi-partner families, the practical consequences are severe:
• An unmarried partner who is not an RDP receives nothing under intestate law, regardless of the length or depth of the relationship.
• A surviving partner may have no legal right to remain in a shared home, access shared accounts, or make decisions about shared property.
• If the estate exceeds $184,500, it goes through probate at the Superior Court of Orange County. For most Orange County families who own property, this threshold is easily crossed.
• Statutory attorney and executor fees under California Probate Code Section 10810 are calculated as a percentage of the gross estate value. On a $900,000 home, combined fees can approach $36,000 or more.
• Anyone not named in a legal document, including a partner of many years, a chosen family member, or a co-parent without a legal relationship to the child, has no standing in the proceedings.
An estate plan does not just protect assets. For LGBTQ+ families and non-traditional households, it is the legal infrastructure that holds your family together when it matters most.

The AMO LAW Approach: Your Family, Your Plan

We do not do document-only estate planning. We do life and legacy planning, and for LGBTQ+ and non-traditional families, that distinction matters more than it does for almost any other client.
Every client starts with a Life and Legacy Planning Session, a two-hour working conversation where we take the time to understand your family structure, your relationships, your assets, and what you want to protect. We ask the questions that surface the things a generic planning process would miss. Who has legal recognition and who does not? Who needs authority in a medical emergency? What do you want to happen to your home, your accounts, and your belongings, and who do you want making those decisions?
We draft documents that are specific to your situation and compliant with California law. We walk you through everything before you sign. We guide you through the trust funding process so your plan actually works when it needs to. And we stay connected, reviewing your plan every three years or whenever your family or your life changes.
Our office is a confidential, judgment-free space. We work with families across the full range of how people build their lives, and we take that work seriously.

“A plan that does not reflect your actual family is not really a plan. It is a set of documents waiting to fail someone you love.” — Cecilia, AMO LAW

Frequently Asked Questions

At the state level, largely yes. California Family Code Section 297.5 grants registered domestic partners most of the same rights as married spouses, including community property rights and intestate inheritance. The significant gap is federal recognition. Registered domestic partnerships are not recognized at the federal level, which affects Social Security survivor benefits, federal tax treatment of shared assets, and certain retirement account rules. Your estate plan needs to address both the state protections you have and the federal gaps that remain.
Under California’s intestate succession laws, your partner inherits nothing. The estate passes to your closest blood relatives, in the order set by California Probate Code. If the estate includes a shared home or other significant assets, your partner may have no legal right to them regardless of how long you have been together or what your intentions were. This is one of the most urgent reasons for an estate plan when a relationship is not formally recognized by law.
Yes. A properly funded living trust avoids probate entirely, which means it never becomes part of the public record. Wills that go through probate at the Superior Court of Orange County do become public. For clients who have privacy concerns about the nature of their relationships or the structure of their family, a trust-based plan is usually the right choice for that reason alone, in addition to all the other benefits.
Without a California Advance Healthcare Directive in place, medical providers follow California’s default hierarchy for healthcare decision-making. That hierarchy runs to a spouse or registered domestic partner first, then adult children, then parents. An unmarried partner, regardless of the relationship, has no default authority. An Advance Healthcare Directive is the document that changes this by explicitly designating the person you want making decisions and giving them the legal authority to do so.
In California, estates exceeding $184,500 in gross value are generally required to go through formal probate if there is no living trust in place. Statutory attorney and executor fees under California Probate Code Section 10810 are calculated as a percentage of the gross estate value. On a $900,000 home, those combined fees can approach $36,000 or more, before court costs and other expenses. A funded living trust avoids probate entirely, which is both a cost savings and a privacy protection.

Your Family Deserves a Plan Built Around Who You Actually Are

Generic estate planning documents were not written with your family in mind. A plan that protects your partner, honors your relationships, and holds up when it matters requires an attorney who understands both California law and the specific legal realities of families like yours.
At AMO LAW, we are here for that work. No judgment, no assumptions, full confidentiality.
Call (949) 891-2114 or schedule a complimentary discovery call today. We serve LGBTQ+ individuals, same-sex couples, registered domestic partners, and non-traditional families throughout Costa Mesa and all of Orange County, in person or virtually.

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