Inheritance is more than just money—it’s a statement, a legacy, a final message from one generation to the next. To be written out of a will doesn’t have just a financial impact… it can have a substantial psychological impact. It can force a reckoning, not only with the loss but with rejection, complicated family history, and the unsettling realization that, in the end, your parents made a choice—one that did not include you.
Emotions can be overwhelming when you find out you’ve been disinherited. There’s grief, certainly, but also betrayal, anger, guilt, shame, and maybe even relief. So, how do you navigate these feelings and move past them in a time of loss and grief? Let’s discuss.
Understanding the why
Before we go any further, it’s worth asking why? Why did your parents write you out of their will? While you may not agree or understand their rationale, it may be worth asking the question to gain more context.
The reasons for disinheritance are rarely straightforward. It could have been a perceived slight, a long-standing feud, a misunderstanding never resolved. Maybe they were influenced by someone else—a sibling, a new spouse, a financial advisor whispering in their ear. Or perhaps it had nothing to do with you at all.
Some parents disinherit children, believing they’re showing “tough love” and that financial independence is the best legacy. Others may act out of resentment or disappointment over a specific act or a history of behavior. In some cases, cognitive decline or external manipulation (e.g., undue influence) may play a role in decisions that may seem out of character.
Understanding the why won’t necessarily change the outcome, and you don’t have to agree with the reasoning, but it can provide clarity. And sometimes, clarity can set up the path toward acceptance and peace (even if that isn’t right now).
Coping with the emotional fallout
Disinheritance can feel like a final act of rejection without recourse for repair. This feeling of betrayal can sit with you and begin to erode your self-worth, fuel resentment, and strain relationships with others still in your life.
Therapy can be invaluable here. It offers a space to process grief, anger, and any lingering childhood wounds. It provides a space to (cathartically) unload all your fears, thoughts, and questions and work with an expert to process them and determine what you can do now. Don’t let their final action haunt you for the rest of your life.
Financial realities: Pivoting
Depending on the situation and family, an inheritance may be a default or a gift. But no matter the family culture, if you had been expecting an inheritance, its absence can cause real-world problems. This is when you have to shift to pragmatic thinking…and quick.
Start by assessing your current financial situation without this revenue stream. For many, an inheritance is incorporated into their financial planning because they were banking on it for retirement, housing, or debt relief. Meet with a financial advisor to explore alternative strategies—investments, budgeting, career shifts—that can help stabilize your future.
It’s also worth considering whether your exclusion was strategic. If your parents left money to a trust or another relative with the understanding that you’d still benefit indirectly, that could change your approach. Open, even if challenging, conversations with surviving family members may provide insight into the broader context of their decision.

Rebuilding family ties—or letting go
Disinheritance often has a ripple effect, affecting the family at large and not only you. It can create rifts between siblings, re-open old wounds, and shift family dynamics in ways that feel irreparable. Some families never fully recover. Others, through continual effort and (painful) honesty, find their way back to each other.
But the first question you have to ask yourself is this: Do you want to rebuild? And if so, what do you hope it looks like?
If a sibling benefited from your exclusion, resentment is natural—but so is uncertainty. Were they complicit? Unaware? Rather than make assumptions, opening up conversations (facilitated by a family therapist or mediator if needed) can help clarify those questions, leading you to mend or step away from familial relationships.
It’s important to validate—not all ties are worth preserving. If disinheritance was part of a lifelong pattern of mistreatment, it might be time to let go—not just of inheritance, but of the need for parental or family approval. Walking away isn’t a failure. Sometimes, it’s self-preservation and freedom.
The legal landscape: Do you have a case?
Disinheritance isn’t always set in stone. There may be legal recourse as wills can be contested on several grounds, including:
- Lack of capacity: If your parent was not of sound mind when they changed their will, it may not be legally valid. For example, if they suffered from dementia.
- Undue influence: You might have a case if another party pressured them into excluding you. For example, Cousin Jimmy was manipulating your poor, sweet Mom into giving him everything.
- Improper execution: Wills must follow specific legal procedures, such as being in writing, signed, and witnessed. If not followed correctly, it could be thrown out.
If you’re thinking about challenging a will, just know that these kinds of legal battles can be long, expensive, or emotionally draining. Even if you have a valid claim, the financial and psychological costs might just not be worth it.
Final thoughts: Creating your own legacy
Disinheritance doesn’t have to define your life moving forward. You get to decide what your legacy will be for your family. Consider what inheritance means to you beyond money. What values, relationships, and contributions do you want to pass down? How has this experience shaped how you want your own children to experience this situation?
Grief and loss are inevitable, but disinheritance doesn’t have to be a life sentence of resentment. Allow yourself to feel and experience all the (valid) emotions that arise, and then (with any needed support) find a way to process the experience so you can regain the agency, autonomy, and the ability to shape your future.

Dr. Vivian Oberling is a licensed clinical psychologist with degrees from UCLA, Harvard, and Stanford. In her private telehealth practice, she works with adults navigating anxiety, identity shifts, and relationship dynamics—whether they’re dating, partnered, or parenting. She also provides executive coaching and behavioral health advisory support to tech startups and legal tools reshaping how we think about love, marriage, and psychological safety. Dr. Oberling combines 10+ years of clinical expertise with modern, real-world insight to help people move through uncertainty with clarity and connection.

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