When someone dies without a will in place or family to take over their assets, their property passes to the Crown.

Buildings, money and all manner personal possessions are handed, without any known family for them to be passed on to.

You could be entitled to a share of a deceased relative’s property if you’re a relative.

And the Government updates a list daily with these unclaimed estates – so that those applicable can claim an estate.

There are unclaimed estates for several people who were either born or died in Essex which are unclaimed.

Who is entitled to claim an estate?

If someone dies without leaving a valid or effective will (intestate) the following are entitled to the estate in the order shown below:

  1. husband, wife or civil partner
  2. children, grandchildren, great grandchildren and so on
  3. mother or father
  4. brothers or sisters who share both the same mother and father, or their children (nieces and nephews)
  5. half brothers or sisters or their children (nieces and nephews of the half blood or their children). ‘Half ’ means they share only one parent with the deceased
  6. grandparents
  7. uncles and aunts or their children (first cousins or their descendants)
  8. half uncles and aunts or their children (first cousins of the half blood or their children). ‘Half’ means they only share one grandparent with the deceased, not both

If you are, for example, a first cousin of the deceased, you would only be entitled to share in the estate if there are no relatives above you in the order of entitlement, for example, a niece or nephew.

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