HI state guide

Hawaii estate risk overview

This guide explains how estate outcomes work in Hawaiiwhen there is no plan. We cover intestacy rules, probate flow, guardianship defaults, and tax exposure in clear, educational language.

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Snapshot

Key default outcomes

  • Intestacy laws determine who receives assets.
  • Probate court oversees the estate and public filings.
  • Guardianship for minors is court-appointed if needed.
  • State and federal tax rules may apply to larger estates.

What happens without a will

Hawaii intestacy sets spouse or reciprocal beneficiary shares using fixed dollar thresholds and percentages, with the remainder passing to descendants and other relatives by statute.

  • If no descendants or parents survive, or if all descendants are also the spouse's and the spouse has no other descendants, the spouse receives the entire intestate estate.
  • If no descendants but a parent survives, the spouse receives the first $400,000 plus three-fourths of the balance.
  • If all descendants are also the spouse's but the spouse has other descendants, the spouse receives the first $330,000 plus one-half of the balance.
  • If any descendant is not the spouse's, the spouse receives the first $220,000 plus one-half of the balance.
  • Any remaining estate passes to descendants by representation, then to parents and other relatives in statutory order.
  • An heir must survive the decedent by 120 hours to inherit under intestacy.

Probate process

Hawaii allows collection of personal property by affidavit for smaller estates and provides a clerk-administered process when no personal representative is appointed.

  • Affidavit collection is available when the Hawaii estate value does not exceed $100,000.
  • Motor vehicles titled to the decedent may be transferred regardless of value under the affidavit process.
  • No personal representative may be pending or appointed for the affidavit process.
  • The clerk of court may administer estates of $100,000 or less when no personal representative is appointed.
  • The small-estate affidavit must be a sworn statement by a successor describing the property and entitlement.

Estate and inheritance tax exposure

Hawaii imposes an estate tax with a $5,490,000 exclusion amount and generally conforms to the federal estate tax structure.

  • Hawaii estate tax applies to estates of residents and Hawaii-situs property of nonresidents.
  • The Hawaii exclusion amount is $5,490,000 (statutory exception to full IRC conformity).
  • The state return is required when a federal estate tax return is required and state tax is due.
  • State estate tax thresholds are separate from the federal exemption and can be lower; confirm current exclusion and filing requirements.

Guardianship for minors

Hawaii courts appoint guardians for minors with required notice and best-interest findings, including priority for a minor’s nominee and options for temporary or emergency appointments.

  • The court may appoint a guardian when statutory conditions are met and the appointment is in the minor’s best interest.
  • A hearing and notice are required, including notice to minors age 14 or older and specified caregivers.
  • A minor age 14 or older may nominate a guardian, and the court gives priority unless contrary to the minor’s best interest.
  • Temporary guardianships (up to 12 months) and emergency guardianships (up to 30 days) are available for immediate need or substantial harm.
  • Older minors may nominate a guardian, subject to court approval.
  • Temporary or emergency guardianships may be available for urgent situations.
  • Courts rely on best-interest findings when appointing a guardian.
  • Notice and hearing requirements apply before appointment.

Risk areas

Explore estate risk dimensions in Hawaii

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Common mistakes in Hawaii

  • Assuming a spouse automatically receives everything under state law.
  • Leaving guardianship decisions to the court by default.
  • Ignoring probate timelines, creditor notices, or court filings.
  • Failing to coordinate beneficiary designations with estate intent.
  • Missing state estate tax thresholds and filing rules.

Who is most exposed

Higher default risk in Hawaii

  • Families with minor children or dependents.
  • Blended families or second marriages.
  • Households with property in more than one state.
  • Business owners without succession instructions.
  • Higher-net-worth estates near state tax thresholds.

Next: explore planning options in Hawaii

EstateRiskIQ does not provide legal advice. We highlight how default outcomes work so you can decide whether to explore professional guidance or planning tools.