How to Name a Guardian for Your Children in New Jersey — and Why Most Parents Avoid It
Most parents would do almost anything for their children. They research car seats, agonize over schools, and lose sleep over fevers. And yet nearly 70 percent of parents with young children have no legal plan in place to protect them if both parents were suddenly gone.

The reason isn’t indifference. It’s that naming a guardian requires parents to sit with one of the hardest questions imaginable — and then have a conversation most people would rather postpone indefinitely.
What you’ll learn in this article:
- What actually happens in New Jersey if you die without naming a guardian
- Why so many parents avoid this decision, and what it costs them
- How to think through the guardian decision without getting stuck
- What belongs in a will to make the nomination legally meaningful
What New Jersey Law Does When You Leave This Blank
If both parents die without a will that names a guardian, a New Jersey court decides who raises the children. That process begins with a petition filed in the County Surrogate’s Court. Family members may step forward. Multiple people may disagree. Until the court reaches a decision, children can be placed in temporary care, sometimes moving between homes while the legal process runs its course.
The court will ultimately appoint whoever it determines is in the best interest of the child. That standard is applied by a judge with no knowledge of the family’s values, relationships, or history. It may result in a good outcome. It may not. The point is that parents who haven’t named a guardian have handed that decision to a stranger operating under time pressure, without guidance about what they would have wanted.
A written nomination in a will carries substantial legal weight in New Jersey. Courts generally follow a parent’s designation, though they retain the authority to appoint someone different if circumstances warrant. Naming a guardian does not guarantee the outcome, but it gives the court clear direction and removes most of the uncertainty.
One more thing parents often don’t know: even after a guardian is named in a will, that person does not automatically assume legal authority. They must file a petition with the Surrogate’s Court and formally qualify before guardianship takes effect. This is a reason to choose someone who is prepared and informed, not someone who will be surprised to learn they were named.
Why Parents Avoid This Decision Longer Than Any Other
Naming a guardian is the most personal decision in the entire estate planning process. It is also the one that gets avoided the longest.
The avoidance is rarely about not caring. Parents delay for a handful of specific reasons, and nearly all of them are understandable. The first is the weight of the question itself. Thinking through who would raise your children if you couldn’t is genuinely difficult. It requires imagining a scenario most people are psychologically motivated not to imagine.
The second reason is the conversation it requires. Once a decision is made, someone has to be asked — and someone else may feel overlooked. Families have fractured over guardian nominations. Parents who know the choice will create tension sometimes avoid making it at all, which solves nothing and leaves everything to a court.
The third reason is disagreement between spouses. Two parents who each have a different sibling, or who prioritize different qualities in a caregiver, can get stuck before the conversation even gets started. The impasse becomes an indefinite delay.
The fourth is the assumption that it will work itself out. Many parents believe a close relative will simply step in, or that the surviving parent’s family will handle it. New Jersey law does not work on assumptions. Verbal promises carry no legal weight. A holiday conversation where a sibling says “of course I’d take the kids” is not a guardianship nomination. Courts cannot honor intent that was never written down.
The Guardian Decision and the Money Decision Are Not the Same
One of the most common mistakes parents make is assuming that naming a guardian also resolves what happens to any money left behind. It does not.
In New Jersey, a minor cannot legally inherit or manage assets directly. Without a trust in place, any money left to children goes under court-supervised guardianship of property, a separate legal arrangement that involves ongoing court oversight, annual reporting requirements, and significant restrictions on how funds can be used. The assets are released to the child outright at age 18.
The person best suited to raise children and the person best suited to manage a pool of money for their benefit are often not the same person. A trusted sibling with strong values and a warm relationship with the kids may not be the right choice to also manage a life insurance payout or investment account on their behalf. Parents who think this through in advance can name a guardian of the person — the caregiver — separately from a trustee, who manages the financial assets. A well-drafted estate plan can coordinate both roles so neither one depends on the other.
How to Think Through the Guardian Decision Without Getting Paralyzed
The question “who should raise our children” is too large to answer directly. It helps to break it into smaller questions.
Values and parenting style. Who in your life shares enough of your values that your children would grow up with a recognizable sense of who their parents were? This doesn’t require a perfect match, but the gap should be one you can live with.
Practical capacity. Does this person have the bandwidth, health, and stability to take on a child or children, potentially for many years? A guardian who is willing but overwhelmed is not the same as a guardian who is willing and capable.
Age and geography. An older relative may be deeply trusted but not well-positioned to raise young children into adulthood. A guardian who lives across the country adds a layer of disruption to an already difficult situation. These factors don’t disqualify anyone, but they belong in the analysis.
The relationship to the children. Someone the children already know and trust will have an easier transition than someone who is the logical choice on paper but a stranger in practice.
Name a backup. Circumstances change. A guardian who is the right choice today may not be available or willing when the time comes. Naming an alternate is a simple step that prevents the entire plan from collapsing on a single point of failure.
Tell the person you are choosing them. A guardian named in a will who learns about it for the first time at the worst possible moment is starting from a much harder place than one who was consulted, agreed, and has had time to think about what they would do.
What the Will Needs to Say — and What It Cannot Do Alone
A guardian nomination in a will is the legal instrument for communicating this decision. It should be specific, unambiguous, and accompanied by a named alternate. It should also address the question of co-guardians carefully: if you name a couple, consider whether you want the spouse or partner to continue as guardian in the event they later separate from your chosen person.
New York has an additional wrinkle worth noting for families with connections to both states. Under New York law, a guardian named in a will cannot act solely by virtue of that appointment. They must still petition the Surrogate’s Court to be formally recognized. The nomination carries weight, but the legal process must be completed.
A will alone is also not a complete plan for parents. A trust for the benefit of minor children, funded through the estate or through a life insurance policy, is how parents ensure the money is managed responsibly and released thoughtfully, rather than handed to an 18-year-old in a lump sum. A will paired with a trust gives parents control over both decisions: who raises the children and how they are supported financially while growing up.
Plan Well. Live Better.
The guardian decision is hard because it matters. Most parents who finally sit down and work through it describe a sense of relief they didn’t expect — not because the conversation was easy, but because it’s done. Milvidskiy Law Group works with New Jersey parents to build estate plans that address guardianship, trusts for minor children, and the full range of documents that turn good intentions into legally binding instructions. The right time to do this is before it becomes urgent.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Estate planning and elder law are highly individual — what is right for one family may not be right for another. We encourage you to speak with a qualified attorney to discuss your specific situation.
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