Can a Surviving Spouse Receive a Share of an Intestate Estate in Tennessee?

April 1, 2026

People often assume a husband or wife automatically inherits when a spouse dies without a will. In Tennessee, that is not always true. While a surviving spouse often does receive an intestate share, there are important situations where the answer is no. Whether a spouse inherits depends on the legal relationship, the timing of death, and whether the property even belongs to the probate estate. Tennessee's intestacy statute gives a surviving spouse a share in many cases, which is exactly why these exceptions matter.

First, what is an intestate estate?

An intestate estate exists when someone dies without a valid will, or when some probate property is not effectively disposed of by a will. Tennessee law then decides who inherits that probate property after debts and charges are paid.

So when can the answer be no?

1. No, if the person is not legally a surviving spouse

The law only gives intestate rights to a legal surviving spouse. If the marriage was invalid, ended in divorce before death, or otherwise does not qualify under Tennessee law, that person may have no intestate share at all. This is often one of the first issues examined in probate when inheritance rights are disputed. This is an inference from the statute's use of "surviving spouse," which means legal spouse status matters.

2. No, if the spouse did not survive the decedent by 120 hours

Tennessee applies a 120-hour survival rule. If a spouse does not survive the decedent by at least 120 hours, that spouse is treated as having predeceased the decedent for intestate succession purposes. In plain terms, if both spouses die close in time and the surviving spouse lives less than five days longer, the answer may be no.

3. No, if the asset is not part of the intestate probate estate

Not every asset passes by intestate succession. Some assets transfer outside probate, depending on title or beneficiary designation. That means a spouse may have no intestate claim to a specific asset because that asset never becomes part of the intestate estate in the first place. Probate administration materials from Tennessee courts distinguish estate administration from assets that pass by other mechanisms.

4. No, if the spouse is claiming more than Tennessee intestacy allows

Sometimes the real question is not whether the spouse gets anything, but whether the spouse gets a particular house, bank account, or the entire estate. The answer can be no. Tennessee law provides that when the decedent leaves surviving issue, the spouse receives either one-third or a child's share, whichever is greater - not necessarily the whole estate. So if the question is, "Does the spouse get all of it?" the answer may be no.

5. No, if the claim involves rights that require separate, timely action

Some spouse protections are separate from intestate inheritance, such as elective share and certain allowances. Those rights can be lost if they are not timely asserted. Tennessee authority shows these claims can be time-barred when filed too late. That does not erase every possible inheritance right, but it can make the answer no as to the specific relief requested.

Why this distinction matters

In Tennessee, the broad statement "a surviving spouse does not inherit from an intestate estate" is wrong. The more accurate statement is this: a surviving spouse can inherit, but not always, and not always from every asset. The answer turns on the probate estate, the family structure, and whether the spouse legally qualifies and survived long enough under Tennessee law.

The bottom line

Can a surviving spouse receive a share of an intestate estate in Tennessee? Often, yes. But in some cases, the answer is no. If the person is not legally a surviving spouse, fails the 120-hour survival rule, or is claiming property that does not pass through intestacy, Tennessee law may prevent that person from receiving an intestate share.

If you are dealing with a probate dispute in Tennessee, getting clear legal advice early can make a major difference in determining whether a surviving spouse has rights in the estate at all.

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