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Genders and Partners: Wills and Estate Planning in Adelaide | Genders and Partners

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For many Australians, superannuation is the largest single asset they will accumulate over a working lifetime. Yet despite its size, superannuation is also one of the most misunderstood assets from an estate planning perspective. The critical point — one that surprises many clients — is that your superannuation does not automatically pass according to your Will.

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Among the more distressing phenomena encountered in succession law practice is the marriage of convenience — sometimes called a predatory marriage — in which a person cultivates a relationship with an older or cognitively vulnerable individual for the purpose of securing an inheritance. The legal consequences for the victim’s family can be severe, and South ...

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Australia’s rates of relationship breakdown and re-partnering mean that blended family structures — where one or both partners bring children from a prior relationship into a new household — are now a common feature of Australian life. Estate planning in a blended family is one of the most complex and emotionally charged challenges in succession law.

The inte...


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When most people think about estate planning, they think about property, bank accounts, superannuation, and personal possessions. Few think about their email inbox, their cryptocurrency wallet, their Netflix subscription, or the thirty thousand photographs stored on a cloud service. Yet for many Australians in 2026, the digital estate is substantial — and it...

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For a business owner, the question ‘what happens to my estate when I die?’ is inseparable from the question ‘what happens to my business?’ The death of a business owner without a succession plan can destroy value that has been built over decades, trigger crippling disputes among partners or shareholders, leave employees without direction, and saddle the surv...

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