You share a home and finances. You’ve built a life together over time. On the surface, it can feel no different from a married couple. But when you look at how Virginia law treats that relationship, the difference becomes clear. If something happens to you, your partner doesn’t automatically inherit your assets, access your bank accounts, or make decisions about your estate. Your family members could step in, the court could get involved, and your partner could be left trying to piece things together during one of the hardest moments of their life. To close that gap, many couples turn to legal tools that let them decide who receives their assets and how those assets are handled after death. One of the most common is a revocable living trust. So, can you create a revocable living trust for unmarried couples in Virginia? Yes, and for many couples in Virginia, it becomes one of the most effective ways to protect your partner’s access to the assets you intend to leave behind.
Virginia law does not extend automatic inheritance rights to unmarried partners the way it does to spouses. Here's a quick look at what a revocable living trust can do for your situation:
When you're not legally married, the law treats your relationship very differently from how it treats spouses. In Virginia, there is no recognition of common law marriage. Unlike community property states, Virginia does not treat unmarried partners as having shared ownership of community property acquired during the relationship. Your partner has no automatic claim to your property or estate under Virginia law. You can review how Virginia handles inheritance rights for unmarried individuals under Virginia's intestacy statutes. That creates real risks:
That's why estate planning for unmarried couples in Northern Virginia requires the same attention and care as any other major financial decision you make together.
A revocable living trust gives you control over your estate while you're alive and after your death. Instead of relying on default rules that favor legally married spouses, you decide how your assets are distributed. Here's how that works:
This structure gives you better control over how your assets are distributed, keeps your affairs private, and reduces uncertainty for the people you leave behind. It also directly affects your ability to avoid probate, which can otherwise delay access to bank accounts, personal property, and other assets held in your name, which a spouse may have legal rights to under Virginia law, unlike an unmarried partner.
One of the most common questions attorneys hear from unmarried couples is whether they can create a joint trust. The answer is yes, but the right structure depends on your situation. A joint trust may work if:
Separate trusts may be better if:
Married couples and spouses often use joint trusts more easily because Virginia law treats them as a unit. For unmarried couples, the structure requires more deliberate estate planning to avoid unintended consequences, including possible gift tax implications depending on how property is contributed and titled. One way to reduce that risk is for each partner to contribute only their own separately owned assets to the trust, rather than commingling property. An estate planning attorney can help you evaluate which approach fits your property, your family, and your long-term goals.
If you pass away without a trust or any estate planning documents, your estate follows Virginia's intestacy laws. Under those rules:
This can lead to conflict, delays, and a distribution of your estate that doesn't reflect your wishes. Without wills, a revocable living trust, or other estate planning documents, even a decades-long partnership carries no legal weight in Virginia probate court.
Creating a revocable living trust involves more than drafting a document. It requires a coordinated estate planning approach involving your assets, finances, and family situation. The basic steps include:
You outline your wishes, name your beneficiaries, and define how your assets will be handled. Virginia's requirements for a valid trust, including the settlor's capacity and intent to create the trust, are governed by Va. Code § 64.2-720.
This person manages the trust and carries out your instructions. A successor trustee steps in if you become incapacitated or pass away.
You must transfer assets into the trust, a process sometimes called funding the trust. This includes bank accounts, property, and investment accounts. An unfunded trust does not avoid probate or control how those assets are distributed.
Some assets, like retirement accounts and life insurance policies, pass through beneficiary designations, not the trust. These must be aligned with your overall estate plan to avoid gaps in coverage for your partner.
Most revocable living trusts do not reduce estate taxes directly, though they can offer administrative advantages depending on your tax laws and overall estate planning strategy. Whether an irrevocable trust makes more sense for tax benefits in your situation is worth discussing with an attorney. This process works best when you work with an estate planning attorney who understands Virginia law and the needs of clients in Fairfax County and across Northern Virginia.
The gap between creating an estate plan and protecting your partner comes down to execution. Even well-structured living trusts can fall short when the details aren't followed through. Common issues to watch for:
Unlike spouses, unmarried partners have no automatic fallback under Virginia law. A trust only protects what's in it, and only if your overall estate planning strategy keeps pace with changes in your life, your property, and your family.
Both living trusts and wills play a role in protecting an unmarried partner, but they function differently and serve different purposes within your estate plan. A will:
A trust:
For unmarried couples, a trust often provides stronger protection than wills alone, particularly because Virginia law gives spouses legal rights that your partner simply does not have without proper estate planning documents in place. Wills remain important for property and assets not placed in the trust and for naming guardians for minor children. Most attorneys recommend using both as part of a coordinated plan.
Your life will change. Your estate plan should keep up. A revocable living trust is flexible. You can amend it as your property, finances, and family circumstances change. That's one of the key differences between a revocable and an irrevocable trust: a revocable living trust can be updated; an irrevocable trust generally cannot. Trust planning also works alongside other estate planning documents:
Together, these documents form an estate planning strategy that protects your partner the way Virginia law protects spouses by default, not because the law requires it, but because you chose it.
Q: Can unmarried couples share a trust in Virginia? A: Yes. A joint trust is possible for unmarried couples, but the structure depends on your joint ownership of property, your financial goals, and your overall estate planning strategy. An estate planning attorney can walk you through whether a joint trust or separate living trusts make more sense for your situation. Q: Does a trust help with avoiding probate in Virginia? A: Yes. The most reliable way to avoid probate in Virginia with a trust is to fund it properly after signing. A fully-funded revocable living trust can reduce or eliminate the need for probate proceedings, allowing your assets and property to pass without court involvement. Q: What happens if my partner dies without a will or trust? A: Under Virginia's intestacy laws, the estate passes to legal heirs, not to an unmarried partner. Unlike spouses, unmarried partners have no automatic inheritance rights under Virginia law. Q: Do unmarried couples need both a trust and a will? A: In most cases, yes. Wills can cover property and assets not placed in the trust and can name guardians for minor children, supporting your overall estate plan. Q: Are there tax benefits to a revocable trust? A: Most revocable living trusts do not provide direct tax benefits. However, they can support better estate administration and, depending on your circumstances, may work alongside other strategies that address estate taxes. Whether an irrevocable trust offers greater tax benefits is worth discussing with an attorney. Q: How is a revocable trust different from an irrevocable trust? A: A revocable living trust can be amended or revoked during your lifetime. An irrevocable trust generally cannot be changed once established, but may offer different asset protection or tax benefits. Your attorney can help you evaluate which structure fits your estate planning goals.
At PJI Law, our Northern Virginia trust attorneys work with clients to build plans that go beyond basic documents. We structure revocable living trusts, coordinate beneficiary designations, align your wills and property ownership, and make sure your partner is protected the way spouses are protected under the law, through deliberate planning, not default rules. Whether you're in Fairfax County or anywhere in Northern Virginia, we focus on thoughtful planning, clear strategy, and long-term protection for the people who matter most to you. If you're ready to put a plan in place or want to talk through your options, schedule a consultation with PJI Law today by calling (703) 865-6100 or completing our confidential online form. At PJI Law, you’ll receive white-glove service and personal attention from a team that treats you like family. Copyright © 2026. PJI Law, PLC. All rights reserved.
Copyright © 2026. PJI Law, PLC. All rights reserved.
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