Yukon Intestacy Calculator: Dying Without a Will

Calculate estate distribution in Yukon under the Estate Administration Act. YT treats common-law partners as spouses immediately with no waiting period.

Your Situation

$

Federal Indian Act rules apply instead of provincial laws

Yukon Rules:

• Preferential amount: $75,000

• Common-law recognized: Yes (0 years)

Estate Administration Act, RSY 2002, c. 77

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Total Estate Value

$500,000

Number of Beneficiaries

3

Province

Yukon

Distribution Breakdown

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Who Inherits Your Estate

BeneficiaryRelationshipShare %AmountNotes
Surviving SpouseSpouse43.3%$216,653Preferential $75,000 + 33% of remainder
Child 1Child28.3%$141,674Share of 67% remainder divided equally
Child 2Child28.3%$141,674Share of 67% remainder divided equally

How the Distribution is Calculated

Yukon Intestacy Formula:

1. Spouse receives preferential amount: $75,000

2. Remainder: $500,000 - $75,000 = $425,000

3. Spouse receives 33% of remainder: $141,653

4. Spouse total: $75,000 + $141,653 = $216,653

5. Children split 67% of remainder: $283,348 ÷ 2 = $141,674 each

Legislation: Estate Administration Act, RSY 2002, c. 77

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About Yukon Intestacy Laws

Preferential Share

$75,000

Spouse's first inheritance

Common-law Status

Common-law partners treated as spouses immediately - NO waiting period required

Recognition threshold

Distribution Split

Spouse receives first $75,000, then 50% with one child or 1/3 with multiple children.

Between spouse & children

Overview

Yukon's intestacy laws are governed by the Estate Administration Act (RSY 2002, c. 77). Yukon has the most progressive common-law recognition policy in all of Canada: common-law partners are treated as spouses for intestacy purposes with NO waiting period required. This is unique and reflects the territory's recognition that formal marriage is not always accessible or desired, particularly in remote communities. The preferential share is $75,000, matching Newfoundland. Yukon uses the Atlantic-style sliding-scale distribution formula where the spousal share varies based on the number of children.

Key Intestacy Rules

  • Preferential share of $75,000
  • NO common-law waiting period - immediate recognition
  • Distribution varies: 50% with one child, 1/3 with multiple
  • Uses Atlantic-style sliding-scale formula
  • Most progressive common-law recognition in Canada
  • All children inherit equally

Distribution Rules

Yukon's distribution hierarchy: First, the married spouse or common-law partner (with NO waiting period) receives the first $75,000. Then, if there is one child, the spouse receives 50% of the remainder and the child receives 50%. If there are two or more children, the spouse receives 1/3 of the remainder and children share 2/3 equally. If there's no spouse, children inherit everything equally. If no descendants, parents take the entire estate. If no parents, siblings share equally. Then more distant relatives. Finally, if no heirs exist, the estate goes to the Yukon government. The sliding-scale formula balances interests based on family size.

Common-law Partner Recognition

Yukon has the most progressive common-law recognition in Canada: common-law partners are treated as spouses for intestacy purposes with ZERO waiting period. As soon as a couple begins living together in a conjugal relationship, they are considered spouses for succession purposes. This is found in the Yukon Estate Administration Act and is unique in Canada. Every other jurisdiction requires 1-3 years of cohabitation, but Yukon recognizes that relationship commitment can exist from the start. This is particularly important in Yukon's small communities where formal marriage may not be immediately accessible. Once in a common-law relationship, partners have identical intestacy rights to married spouses. No will is needed to protect a common-law partner in Yukon (though a will is still highly recommended for clarity and other reasons).

Special Considerations

Yukon's system includes several progressive and unique features: (1) NO waiting period for common-law recognition is unprecedented in Canada and extremely progressive. (2) The sliding-scale distribution (50/50 with one child, 33/67 with multiple) matches the Atlantic formula. (3) Preferential share of $75,000 is moderate and reasonable. (4) Stepchildren do NOT inherit unless legally adopted. (5) Adopted children have identical rights to biological children. (6) Indigenous customs and laws may apply in certain circumstances. (7) Half-siblings inherit equally with full siblings. (8) Yukon uses "per stirpes" distribution for grandchildren. (9) The Public Administrator handles estates with no heirs. (10) For Indigenous people with Indian status dying on reserve land, federal Indian Act provisions may apply instead of territorial law. (11) Yukon's progressive approach reflects its small population and the importance of flexible family law in remote communities.

Unique Features

  • Yukon has NO waiting period for common-law partners - immediate recognition as spouses
  • Most progressive common-law recognition policy in Canada
  • Uses the Atlantic sliding-scale formula despite being a territory
  • Preferential share of $75,000 matches NL
  • Reflects Yukon's progressive approach to family law

Governing Legislation

Estate Administration Act, RSY 2002, c. 77

Frequently Asked Questions

About This Calculator

v1.0Updated: October 2025

When a Canadian dies without a valid will, they die "intestate." This intestate succession calculator shows exactly how your estate would be distributed according to Canadian provincial laws if you die without a will. Understanding intestacy laws is crucial for estate planning because provincial legislation determines who inherits your assets—often in ways that don't align with your wishes. Each Canadian province has different intestate succession rules, and the differences can be dramatic. For example, Ontario's Succession Law Reform Act gives a surviving spouse a $350,000 preferential share before children inherit, while Manitoba's threshold is only $50,000. Quebec operates under civil law and does NOT recognize common-law partners at all for intestate succession—only legally married spouses inherit automatically. Our free intestate succession calculator models all 10 provinces' intestacy laws and shows you the exact distribution based on your family situation. You can compare how different provinces treat estates, see how common-law relationships affect inheritance, and understand why having a will is essential. The calculator handles complex scenarios including multiple children, parents, siblings, and extended family, applying the correct provincial formulas to show who inherits what percentage and dollar amount. The results may surprise you. Did you know that in Quebec, your spouse only gets 1/3 of your estate if you have children? Or that in most provinces, your common-law partner must have lived with you for 2-3 years to inherit? Without a will, you have NO CONTROL over who receives your assets—provincial law decides for you. This calculator demonstrates the urgent importance of estate planning and creating a legally valid will that reflects your true wishes.

Key Features

  • Calculate intestate distribution for all 10 Canadian provinces
  • Model any family situation: spouse, children, parents, siblings
  • See exact dollar amounts each beneficiary would receive
  • Visual pie chart showing distribution percentages
  • Provincial comparison mode to see how rules differ
  • Common-law partner recognition by province
  • Step-by-step math explanation of intestacy formulas
  • Warning alerts for surprising outcomes

When to Use This Calculator

  • Understanding who inherits if you die without a will
  • Comparing intestate distribution vs your desired distribution
  • Learning how common-law relationships affect inheritance
  • Seeing how different provinces treat estates differently
  • Educating family members about importance of estate planning
  • Estate planning preparation before meeting with lawyer
  • Teaching children about Canadian succession law
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