You’ve built a life together—shared responsibilities, a home, and years of commitment. In every meaningful way, you’re a family.
But legally, that’s not how it works.
Without the protection of marriage, your partner has no automatic authority over your health care, finances, or estate. And in a crisis, that gap can leave them without access, decision-making power, or financial security.
Let’s walk through where the risks lie—and how to fix them.
Why Unmarried Couples Face Greater Legal Risk
Marriage comes with built-in legal protections. Spouses can make medical decisions, inherit assets, and access financial accounts by default.
Unmarried partners don’t have those rights—no matter how long you’ve been together.
If something happens to you:
- Your partner may not be able to make medical decisions
- Hospitals could limit or deny access
- Your assets may pass to relatives instead
- Family disputes become more likely
In the eyes of the law, your partner may be treated as a stranger. Without a plan, the person you trust most may have no legal standing when it matters most.
How Asset Ownership Can Work Against You
Many couples assume that sharing a life means sharing protection. Unfortunately, that’s not how the legal system works.
What matters is ownership—not intention.
Here’s where problems often arise:
- Your home: If it’s in one partner’s name, the surviving partner may have no right to stay. The property passes according to the deceased partner’s estate, which, without a plan, likely means it goes to relatives who may choose to sell it.
- Bank accounts: Without joint ownership or a payable-on-death designation, funds may be inaccessible. Your partner might not be able to pay the mortgage, the utilities, or even basic living expenses while the estate is being settled.
- Retirement accounts & life insurance: These pass by beneficiary designation—not your will. An outdated or incomplete designation can cause those assets to be distributed to someone other than your partner.
- Personal property: Without clear instructions, disputes can arise over meaningful or valuable items.
Even strong, committed relationships can unravel legally without proper documentation.
Asset structure—not relationship length—determines what happens. Without a plan that addresses each of these pieces, your partner is vulnerable. That’s exactly why proactive and comprehensive planning matters so much for unmarried couples, and why a generic set of documents won’t cut it.
The “Common Law Marriage” Misconception
It’s a common belief that living together long enough creates legal rights.
In reality, most states do not recognize common law marriage. And in those that do, the requirements are strict and often difficult to prove. Relying on this assumption can leave your partner completely unprotected.
Even in states that recognize it, common law marriage typically requires both partners to hold themselves out as married publicly, intend to be married, and live together. If there’s any ambiguity, it can take a court battle to establish, and that’s the last thing your partner needs while grieving.
And if you live in a state that doesn’t recognize common law marriage at all? That informal arrangement provides zero legal protection, regardless of how long you’ve been together or how intertwined your lives are.
If it’s not formally documented, it likely won’t hold up legally. This is why deliberate, documented planning isn’t optional for unmarried couples. It’s essential.
What a Strong Estate Plan Should Include
For unmarried couples, estate planning must be intentional and comprehensive.
A well-designed plan typically includes:
- Durable Financial Power of Attorney – Allows your partner to manage finances if you cannot. Without it, they have no legal standing to access anything.
- Medical Power of Attorney (Health Care Proxy) – Grants decision-making authority for your care. This is the document that keeps hospitals from defaulting to the biological family.
- Advance Directive / Living Will – Documents your medical wishes.
- Will or Trust – Ensures your assets go to your partner and not your state’s default plan.
- Updated Beneficiary Designations – Directly transfers key assets that aren’t tied up in probate.
- Title Review – Aligns ownership with your intentions.
Each piece plays a critical role—and missing just one can create serious gaps. A complete, coordinated plan is essential for real protection.
Why Documents Alone Aren’t Enough
Having documents is only part of the equation.
Plans often fail because they’re outdated, incomplete, or inaccessible when needed. And without legal default protections, unmarried partners are especially vulnerable when something goes wrong.
What truly makes a plan work is ongoing guidance—someone who ensures your documents stay current and your partner knows exactly what to do in a crisis.
A plan only works if it’s maintained, accessible, and supported. A plan that no one can find or follow isn’t a plan. The relationship with your attorney is what makes the documents work.
Take the First Step Toward Protection
If you’re not legally married, your partner does not automatically have the right to step in if something happens to you.
That means no authority, no access, and potentially no inheritance—unless you take action.
We help unmarried couples create thoughtful, comprehensive estate plans designed for real life—not one-size-fits-all documents. We take the time to understand your specific situation and design a plan that actually works when your loved ones need it to.
Take the first step toward comprehensive protection for yourself and your loved ones. Click here to schedule a complimentary 15-minute call and get started today.
This article is a service of Flores Legal Group, LLC. We don’t just draft documents; we ensure you make informed and empowered decisions about life and death, for yourself and the people you love. That’s why we offer a Life & Legacy Planning Session, during which you will get more financially organized than you’ve ever been before and make all the best choices for the people you love.
This material was created for educational and informational purposes only and is not intended as ERISA, tax, legal, or investment advice. If you are seeking legal advice specific to your needs, such advice services must be obtained on your own, separate from this educational material.

