My Children No Longer Speak to Me: Do I Have the Right to Deprive Them of Their Inheritance?

Years of silence. Calls that go unanswered. A relationship that fades until nothing remains but an ache you can’t quite name.

Many parents know this quiet kind of heartbreak. And after a long stretch without news, a painful question sometimes surfaces: “If my child has cut me out of their life, can I cut them out of my inheritance?”

In France, the answer is more complex than it seems.

What French Law Actually Allows
French inheritance law is built around one central idea: Certain heirs cannot be excluded.

Most notably:

children

spouses

and, in some situations, parents

For these heirs, the law automatically preserves a portion of the estate in their favor. This is la réserve héréditaire—the reserved portion.

Everything else is la quotité disponible, the disposable portion.

This part may be left to whomever you wish: a friend, a charity, a sibling, or another child. Through it, the law recognizes that emotional bonds don’t always follow bloodlines.

Can a Parent Truly Disinherit a Child?
Short answer: not because of silence or conflict.

French law is extremely protective of children’s inheritance rights. A child can only be excluded in exceptionally serious circumstances, such as:

attempted murder or violence against the parent

physical or psychological abuse

malicious false accusations in court

serious crimes committed against the parent

Even then, disinheritance is never automatic.

It must be:

explicitly written in a valid will

backed with evidence

and often confirmed through legal proceedings

It is a demanding process, because the law considers the parent–child bond foundational, even when strained.

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