Many single Floridians assume estate planning is for married couples or parents. The opposite is often true: without a spouse, no one has automatic authority over your affairs, and Florida’s default rules may send your assets to relatives you never intended to benefit. Here are the mistakes single people in Florida make most.
Mistake 1: Relying on Intestacy
If you die single without a will, Florida’s intestacy statutes in Chapter 732 decide who inherits. With no spouse and no descendants, your estate passes to parents, then siblings, then more distant relatives, in a fixed order. A partner, close friend, or favorite charity receives nothing. If you want anyone outside that statutory line to inherit, you must have a valid will signed under Section 732.502 or a trust.
Mistake 2: No One Authorized If You Are Incapacitated
A single person has no default decision-maker. If you are in an accident, without a durable power of attorney under Chapter 709 and a designation of health care surrogate, your family may have to petition a Florida court for guardianship, which is slow, public, and expensive. Choosing your own agents in advance avoids a judge appointing someone for you.
Mistake 3: Assuming Family Will Sort It Out
Without documents, even well-meaning relatives lack legal authority to pay your bills, access accounts, or speak with your doctors. Verbal arrangements carry no weight. Put your wishes in writing with the proper Florida formalities so the right person can act immediately.
Mistake 4: Outdated Beneficiary Designations
Retirement accounts, life insurance, and bank accounts with payable-on-death designations pass outside your will. Single people often leave an old beneficiary in place, such as a former partner or a deceased parent. Review and update these so they match your current intentions.
Mistake 5: Forgetting the Home
If you own a Florida home, homestead protection under Article X, Section 4 still affects how it passes. A single owner with no minor children has more freedom to devise the homestead, but if you want it to avoid probate, a Lady Bird deed (enhanced life estate deed) can transfer it automatically at death while you keep full control during life. This is a popular, economical Florida option for unmarried homeowners.
Mistake 6: Overcomplicating or Avoiding It Entirely
Some single Floridians skip planning because they think it is only for the wealthy. With no state estate or inheritance tax in Florida, a clean plan is usually simple: a will or revocable trust, a durable power of attorney, a health care surrogate, and a living will. For smaller estates, your heirs may even qualify for summary administration under Chapter 735, a faster probate process.
Take Control of the Defaults
Estate planning for single people is really about replacing the state’s defaults with your own choices, both for who inherits and who acts when you cannot.
This is general information, not legal advice. Florida intestacy and incapacity rules are specific, so consult a licensed Florida estate planning attorney to put valid documents in place.


