Wills and Tenants in Common?

🏡 Wills and Tenants in Common

Thinking about what happens to your home if something happens to you? Let’s make it simple! Being “tenants in common” means you and your co-owner each own a specific share of your property—so what you can do in your Will REALLY matters.

What Does “Tenants in Common” Mean?

With tenants in common, you own your share—no one else can decide what happens to it when you die!
  • You and your co-owner can have equal or different shares (e.g., 50/50, 70/30).
  • Each share can be left by Will to anyone you choose—not just the co-owner.
  • This gives you more control over who inherits your part of the home.

Why Make a Will as a Tenant in Common?

If you don’t make a Will, your share could go to someone you don’t expect under intestacy rules.
  • Protects children from earlier relationships or favourite relatives.
  • Makes sure your partner can stay in the property if you use trusts.
  • Can help reduce inheritance tax or protect against care home fees.

What Happens When a Tenant in Common Dies?

Your share does not automatically go to the other owner. It goes where your Will says!
  • If you leave a Will, your share goes to whoever you choose.
  • If you don’t, it follows UK intestacy rules (which might surprise you).
  • The person inheriting your share might become a co-owner with the survivor, or the property could even need to be sold to divide the value.

Using Family Trusts for Extra Protection

  • A “life interest trust” lets your partner live in the home for life, while your share goes to your chosen children after your partner passes.
  • Ensures children are not accidentally cut out of their inheritance.
  • Helps stop the home being lost to remarriage, family disputes or care fees.

Protecting Against Care Home Fees with Tenants in Common

Owning your property as tenants in common—especially with a property trust in your Will—can help safeguard your family’s inheritance against care home fee assessments.
  • When your home is owned as tenants in common, each owner’s share is treated separately if the local authority looks at care home fees in the future.
  • If one co-owner needs care, only their share is generally counted for means testing—the other share can be “ring-fenced” for children or chosen beneficiaries by using a Will or trust.
  • This approach can help reduce the risk of losing the whole property to care costs, giving your loved ones more financial security.
  • Many families use a property protection trust (also called a “life interest trust”) in their Wills. This lets the surviving partner stay in the home for life, while the first partner’s share is protected for children or other beneficiaries.
Important: The local authority can challenge your arrangements under the deliberate deprivation of assets (DDA) rules if they believe you changed ownership mainly to avoid care fees. For the best protection, make these changes as part of routine estate planning, well before care becomes likely, and always seek specialist legal advice.
  • The process is called “severance of tenancy” if you need to move from joint tenants to tenants in common, and it's straightforward for most property owners.
  • This strategy does not guarantee total protection, but it often means at least half the home’s value is preserved for your chosen heirs.

Can I Change from Joint Tenancy?

“Joint tenancy” means your share always passes to the other owner. To change, you must “sever” the joint tenancy and become tenants in common.
  • It’s easy—your Will writer or conveyancer can serve a notice of severance.
  • Check your title deeds if you’re unsure—your advisor can help.

Quick FAQs

Most Asked! Simple Answer
What’s the difference between joint tenants and tenants in common? Joint tenants = all own together; tenants in common = separate shares.
Who gets my share if I don’t have a Will? Intestacy rules pick—might not be your partner!
Can I leave my share to anyone? Yes—with a Will, it can go to family, friends, or charity.
Do I need a trust? It helps if you want your partner to stay but your share to go to your children.
How do I change my ownership type? Ask for a notice of severance—simple and quick!

Why Trust This Guide?

Written by a UK-qualified Will writer with years of real case experience helping families just like yours.
Updated for 2025 so the info is correct, practical, and people-first (not just legal jargon).
Take Action!

If you own as tenants in common or want to make sure your home goes where you want, don’t leave it to chance.
Book a chat with a specialist Will writer today—get the clarity your family deserves!