Inheritance Shares of Legitimate and Illegitimate Children in the Philippines

Introduction

Inheritance in the Philippines is governed mainly by the Civil Code of the Philippines, particularly the rules on succession, compulsory heirs, legitime, intestate succession, testate succession, disinheritance, representation, and collation.

One of the most common inheritance issues in Filipino families involves the respective shares of legitimate children and illegitimate children. The distinction is legally important because, under Philippine succession law, legitimate and illegitimate children are both compulsory heirs, but they do not inherit equally in all situations.

As a general rule, an illegitimate child is entitled to a legitime equal to one-half of the legitime of a legitimate child. However, the final distribution depends on whether the deceased left a will, whether there is a surviving spouse, whether there are parents or ascendants, whether there are legitimate children, how much property belongs to the estate, and whether the estate includes conjugal, community, or exclusive property.

This article explains the key principles in Philippine law on inheritance shares of legitimate and illegitimate children.


I. Basic Concepts in Philippine Succession

1. Succession

Succession is the legal process by which the rights and obligations of a deceased person are transmitted to heirs.

The person who died is called the decedent. The persons who inherit are called heirs, devisees, or legatees, depending on the kind of succession and the nature of what is given.

Succession may be:

Testate succession — when the deceased left a valid will.

Intestate succession — when the deceased died without a valid will, or the will does not dispose of all property.

Mixed succession — when part of the estate is covered by a will and part is distributed by law.


2. Estate

The estate consists of the property, rights, and obligations of the deceased that are not extinguished by death.

Before heirs receive their final shares, the estate must generally be determined by accounting for:

the decedent’s exclusive property; the decedent’s share in conjugal or community property; debts and obligations; funeral and estate expenses; taxes; advances to heirs; donations that may affect legitime; and the compulsory shares of heirs.

A common mistake is to divide all properties immediately among children without first determining whether the surviving spouse already owns one-half of the conjugal or community property.


3. Heirs

Heirs are persons called by law or by will to inherit.

In Philippine law, some heirs are called compulsory heirs because the law reserves a portion of the estate for them. This reserved portion is called the legitime.

Children, whether legitimate or illegitimate, may be compulsory heirs.


II. Legitimate and Illegitimate Children

1. Legitimate Children

Legitimate children are generally those conceived or born during a valid marriage of their parents.

They enjoy full successional rights as legitimate descendants. In inheritance, legitimate children are primary compulsory heirs and generally exclude more remote legitimate descendants and ascendants, subject to the rules on representation.


2. Illegitimate Children

Illegitimate children are children conceived and born outside a valid marriage, unless otherwise legitimated or covered by special legal rules.

Illegitimate children also have inheritance rights. They are compulsory heirs of their parents, but their legitime is generally one-half of the legitime of each legitimate child.

An illegitimate child must establish filiation to inherit. Filiation may be shown through the record of birth, admission in a public document, handwritten instrument, open and continuous possession of status, or other evidence allowed by law and jurisprudence, depending on the circumstances.


3. Legitimated Children

A child who was originally illegitimate may become legitimated if the legal requirements are met, commonly through the subsequent valid marriage of the parents when the child was not disqualified by law.

Once legitimated, the child generally enjoys the rights of a legitimate child, including successional rights.


4. Adopted Children

A legally adopted child is generally considered a legitimate child of the adopter for purposes of succession between the adopter and the adopted child.

However, adoption creates specific legal effects that must be analyzed under the adoption decree and applicable laws. An adopted child’s inheritance rights may differ depending on whether the issue concerns the adoptive family or biological family.


III. Compulsory Heirs

Under the Civil Code, compulsory heirs include:

legitimate children and descendants, with respect to their legitimate parents and ascendants; legitimate parents and ascendants, with respect to their legitimate children and descendants; the surviving spouse; acknowledged natural children and natural children by legal fiction, and other illegitimate children under the law; and, in certain cases, legitimate brothers and sisters, nephews, and nieces.

In modern practical terms, the most common compulsory heirs in inheritance disputes are:

legitimate children; illegitimate children; surviving spouse; legitimate parents or ascendants; and, in some cases, descendants by right of representation.

The presence or absence of legitimate children greatly affects the inheritance shares of illegitimate children.


IV. Legitime

1. Meaning of Legitime

The legitime is the portion of the estate that the law reserves for compulsory heirs.

A person making a will cannot freely dispose of the legitime. If a will impairs the legitime of compulsory heirs, the dispositions may be reduced.


2. Free Portion

The free portion is the part of the estate that the decedent may dispose of freely by will.

If there is no will, the free portion is not separately assigned by the testator; the estate is distributed according to intestate succession rules.


3. Why Legitime Matters

Legitime matters because a parent cannot simply disinherit a child by silence, omission, favoritism, or unequal donation unless the law allows it.

A legitimate or illegitimate child who is a compulsory heir may challenge transactions, donations, or testamentary provisions that impair his or her legitime.


V. General Rule: Illegitimate Child Gets One-Half of the Share of a Legitimate Child

The most important rule is:

The legitime of each illegitimate child is one-half of the legitime of each legitimate child.

This does not always mean the illegitimate child gets exactly one-half of the final intestate share in every possible situation, but it is the central rule in many inheritance computations.

Example:

If each legitimate child’s legitime is equivalent to 1 share, each illegitimate child’s legitime is equivalent to 1/2 share.

Thus, if the estate is divided among legitimate and illegitimate children without other complicating heirs, the common working ratio is:

Legitimate child : Illegitimate child = 2 : 1

So, each legitimate child receives twice the share of each illegitimate child.


VI. Important Limitation: Illegitimate Children Cannot Receive More Than the Free Portion Allows

The legitime of illegitimate children is subject to the rule that their total legitime must not impair the legitime of legitimate children and the surviving spouse.

When there are many illegitimate children, their shares may be limited by the available portion of the estate.

This is especially important when the decedent has legitimate children, because the law strongly protects the legitime of legitimate descendants.


VII. Basic Inheritance Scenarios

Scenario 1: The deceased leaves legitimate children only

If the deceased leaves legitimate children and no surviving spouse, no illegitimate children, and no will, the legitimate children inherit in equal shares.

Example:

Estate: ₱3,000,000 Children: 3 legitimate children

Each child receives:

₱3,000,000 ÷ 3 = ₱1,000,000

Each legitimate child gets equal rights.


Scenario 2: The deceased leaves illegitimate children only

If the deceased leaves only illegitimate children and no legitimate children, no surviving spouse, no legitimate parents, and no will, the illegitimate children may inherit the estate in equal shares, subject to applicable rules.

Example:

Estate: ₱2,000,000 Children: 2 illegitimate children No spouse, no legitimate children, no legitimate parents

Each illegitimate child receives:

₱2,000,000 ÷ 2 = ₱1,000,000

In this situation, there are no legitimate children whose shares must be doubled in comparison.


Scenario 3: The deceased leaves legitimate and illegitimate children, no surviving spouse

If the deceased leaves legitimate and illegitimate children, and no surviving spouse, the common distribution ratio is:

Each legitimate child gets twice the share of each illegitimate child.

Example:

Estate: ₱5,000,000 Legitimate children: 2 Illegitimate children: 2 No surviving spouse

Use the ratio:

Each legitimate child = 2 shares Each illegitimate child = 1 share

Total shares:

2 legitimate children × 2 = 4 2 illegitimate children × 1 = 2 Total = 6 shares

Value per share:

₱5,000,000 ÷ 6 = ₱833,333.33

Each legitimate child receives:

2 shares × ₱833,333.33 = ₱1,666,666.67

Each illegitimate child receives:

1 share × ₱833,333.33 = ₱833,333.33


Scenario 4: The deceased leaves legitimate children and a surviving spouse

If the deceased leaves legitimate children and a surviving spouse, the surviving spouse is also a compulsory heir.

In intestate succession, the surviving spouse generally receives a share equal to that of one legitimate child.

Example:

Estate: ₱4,000,000 Legitimate children: 3 Surviving spouse: 1 No illegitimate children

Total equal shares:

3 legitimate children + surviving spouse = 4 shares

Each receives:

₱4,000,000 ÷ 4 = ₱1,000,000

Each legitimate child receives ₱1,000,000. The surviving spouse receives ₱1,000,000.

Important: This assumes the ₱4,000,000 is already the estate of the deceased, not the entire conjugal or community property.


Scenario 5: The deceased leaves legitimate children, illegitimate children, and a surviving spouse

This is one of the most common and most sensitive scenarios.

The general approach is:

legitimate children receive their shares; the surviving spouse receives a share generally equal to one legitimate child; illegitimate children receive one-half of the share of a legitimate child, subject to the rule that their shares must not impair the legitime of legitimate children and spouse.

A practical ratio often used in intestate distribution is:

Legitimate child : Surviving spouse : Illegitimate child = 2 : 2 : 1

Example:

Estate: ₱7,000,000 Legitimate children: 2 Illegitimate children: 2 Surviving spouse: 1

Assign shares:

Each legitimate child = 2 shares Surviving spouse = 2 shares Each illegitimate child = 1 share

Total shares:

2 legitimate children × 2 = 4 Surviving spouse × 2 = 2 2 illegitimate children × 1 = 2 Total = 8 shares

Value per share:

₱7,000,000 ÷ 8 = ₱875,000

Each legitimate child receives:

2 × ₱875,000 = ₱1,750,000

Surviving spouse receives:

2 × ₱875,000 = ₱1,750,000

Each illegitimate child receives:

1 × ₱875,000 = ₱875,000


Scenario 6: The deceased leaves illegitimate children and a surviving spouse, but no legitimate children

If there are no legitimate children or descendants, but there are illegitimate children and a surviving spouse, both inherit.

The surviving spouse and illegitimate children share the estate according to the rules of intestate succession.

A common rule is that the surviving spouse receives one-half of the estate and the illegitimate children receive the other half, to be divided equally among them, when they concur without legitimate descendants or ascendants.

Example:

Estate: ₱3,000,000 Surviving spouse: 1 Illegitimate children: 2 No legitimate children No legitimate parents

Surviving spouse receives:

₱1,500,000

Illegitimate children collectively receive:

₱1,500,000

Each illegitimate child receives:

₱1,500,000 ÷ 2 = ₱750,000


Scenario 7: The deceased leaves legitimate parents and illegitimate children, but no legitimate children

If the deceased has no legitimate children, the legitimate parents or ascendants may become compulsory heirs.

If legitimate parents and illegitimate children concur, the computation may differ from the simple 2:1 child ratio because ascendants are involved.

In general, legitimate parents may receive their reserved share, while illegitimate children also receive their legally recognized share. The exact distribution depends on whether there is a will and whether a surviving spouse exists.

This scenario often requires careful legal computation.


Scenario 8: The deceased leaves no children but leaves legitimate parents and a surviving spouse

This article focuses on children, but it is important to mention that if the decedent leaves no children or descendants, the surviving spouse may concur with legitimate parents or ascendants.

Illegitimate children, if present, may alter the distribution.


VIII. Testate Succession: When There Is a Will

1. A Will Cannot Impair Legitime

A Filipino testator may make a will, but the will cannot deprive compulsory heirs of their legitime unless there is valid disinheritance.

Thus, a parent cannot simply write:

“I leave everything to my legitimate children and nothing to my illegitimate child.”

If the illegitimate child is legally recognized and has inheritance rights, that provision may be reduced or invalidated insofar as it impairs legitime.

Likewise, a parent cannot give everything to one favorite child if it prejudices the legitime of the others.


2. Institution of Heirs

In a will, the testator may institute heirs and give legacies or devises.

But if the will gives too much to one person and leaves too little for compulsory heirs, the excess may be reduced.


3. Free Portion May Be Given to Anyone

After legitimes are satisfied, the free portion may generally be given to any person not legally incapacitated to inherit.

This means the testator may use the free portion to favor:

a legitimate child; an illegitimate child; the surviving spouse; a relative; a friend; a charity; or even a stranger.

Therefore, an illegitimate child may receive more than the minimum legitime if the parent gives part or all of the free portion to that child.


4. Illegitimate Child May Receive More by Will

Although the illegitimate child’s compulsory legitime is generally one-half that of a legitimate child, the parent may give additional property to the illegitimate child from the free portion.

Example:

Estate: ₱6,000,000 One legitimate child One illegitimate child No surviving spouse

Minimum legitime:

Legitimate child: generally protected by law Illegitimate child: one-half of legitimate child’s legitime Free portion: may be disposed of by will

The testator may give the free portion to the illegitimate child, allowing the illegitimate child to receive more than the minimum required by law, as long as the legitimate child’s legitime is not impaired.


IX. Intestate Succession: When There Is No Will

If the deceased died without a valid will, the estate is distributed according to law.

For children, the main rules are:

legitimate children exclude legitimate parents and ascendants; illegitimate children inherit together with legitimate children, but at a reduced proportion; the surviving spouse may inherit together with children; and illegitimate children do not exclude legitimate children.


X. Legitimate Children Exclude Legitimate Parents

If a deceased person leaves legitimate children, the legitimate parents of the deceased generally do not inherit as compulsory heirs in intestacy because the nearer descendants exclude ascendants.

Example:

The deceased left:

2 legitimate children 1 surviving parent No spouse

The legitimate children inherit; the surviving parent does not receive an intestate share because legitimate descendants exclude legitimate ascendants.


XI. Illegitimate Children Do Not Exclude Legitimate Parents in the Same Way

If there are no legitimate children, but there are illegitimate children and legitimate parents, the law may allow both to inherit.

This reflects the structure of compulsory succession where legitimate ascendants and illegitimate children may concur in certain cases.

Because this situation is more technical, the estate should be computed carefully.


XII. Surviving Spouse and Children

The surviving spouse is not merely a property co-owner; the spouse may also be an heir.

This creates a two-step analysis:

First, determine the property regime and separate the surviving spouse’s own share from the conjugal or community property.

Second, distribute the deceased spouse’s estate among the heirs.

Example:

A husband dies leaving a wife and children. The spouses had conjugal property worth ₱10,000,000.

Before inheritance, the wife may already own one-half of the conjugal property:

Wife’s conjugal share: ₱5,000,000 Husband’s estate: ₱5,000,000

Only the husband’s ₱5,000,000 estate is divided among heirs.

If the heirs are the wife, two legitimate children, and one illegitimate child, the ₱5,000,000 estate may be divided using the applicable ratio.

The wife therefore receives:

her own ₱5,000,000 conjugal share; plus her inheritance from the husband’s estate.

This distinction is crucial.


XIII. Property Regimes and Inheritance

1. Absolute Community of Property

For marriages governed by the Family Code without a prenuptial agreement, the default regime is generally absolute community of property.

Under absolute community, most property owned by the spouses becomes community property, subject to exclusions.

When one spouse dies, the community is liquidated. The surviving spouse’s share is separated first. The deceased spouse’s share becomes part of the estate.


2. Conjugal Partnership of Gains

For older marriages or marriages with agreements, conjugal partnership may apply.

Under this system, spouses generally share in the gains or property acquired during marriage, while certain properties remain exclusive.

Upon death, the partnership is liquidated. The surviving spouse receives his or her share, and only the deceased’s share forms part of the estate.


3. Complete Separation of Property

If spouses agreed to separation of property, each spouse’s estate generally consists of his or her own property.

The surviving spouse may still inherit as a compulsory heir, even if the spouse does not own half of the other spouse’s property by property regime.


XIV. Exclusive Property and Conjugal Property

A child’s inheritance depends on the estate, not simply on all property associated with the family.

For example, if a house is registered in the name of the deceased but was actually conjugal or community property, the surviving spouse may have a prior ownership share.

If the property was inherited by the deceased from his or her own parents, it may be exclusive property, subject to the applicable property regime.

Thus, before computing children’s shares, determine:

When was the property acquired? Was the deceased married at the time? What property regime applied? Was the property inherited, donated, or bought? Whose funds were used? Is there a prenuptial agreement? Was the property paraphernal, capital, conjugal, or community property? Are there debts or encumbrances?


XV. Recognition of Illegitimate Children

An illegitimate child generally must establish filiation to inherit.

1. Proof of filiation

Filiation may be established through:

the record of birth appearing in the civil register; admission in a public document; admission in a private handwritten instrument signed by the parent; open and continuous possession of the status of an illegitimate child; or other evidence allowed by law.

The sufficiency of proof depends on whether the action is brought during the lifetime of the parent or after death, and on the type of evidence available.


2. Surname and Birth Certificate

Use of the father’s surname may help but does not automatically settle all inheritance questions.

A birth certificate signed by the father acknowledging the child can be strong evidence of filiation. But if the birth certificate does not contain legally sufficient acknowledgment, additional proof may be needed.


3. DNA Evidence

DNA evidence may be relevant in proving filiation, especially in contested cases. However, inheritance claims based on DNA still need to comply with procedural and evidentiary rules.


4. Time Limits

Actions to establish filiation may be subject to time limitations and rules depending on the kind of proof available.

This is especially important when the alleged parent is already deceased. Delay can seriously affect the child’s ability to claim inheritance.


XVI. Rights of Illegitimate Children

Illegitimate children may have the following rights:

right to support from the parent, subject to law; right to use surname under applicable rules; right to legitime; right to participate in settlement of estate if filiation is established; right to challenge impairment of legitime; and right to receive donations or testamentary dispositions from the parent, subject to legitime rules.

However, illegitimate children generally do not have the same intestate share as legitimate children when they inherit together with legitimate children.


XVII. The Barrier Between Legitimate and Illegitimate Families

Philippine succession law maintains a separation between the legitimate and illegitimate lines in certain respects.

As a general principle, illegitimate children do not inherit by intestate succession from the legitimate relatives of their parent, and legitimate relatives do not inherit by intestate succession from the illegitimate child, except as allowed by law.

This is sometimes called the “iron curtain rule” in succession.

Example:

An illegitimate child may inherit from his father if filiation is established. But the illegitimate child generally does not inherit by intestacy from the father’s legitimate relatives, such as the father’s legitimate parents or legitimate children, unless a specific legal basis exists.


XVIII. Representation

Representation is a legal fiction by which a person inherits in the place of another.

For example, a grandchild may inherit by representation if the parent, who would have inherited, predeceased the decedent.

In the context of legitimate and illegitimate children, representation can be technical.

1. Legitimate grandchildren

Legitimate grandchildren may inherit by representation from a legitimate child who predeceased the decedent.

Example:

Grandfather dies. His legitimate son died earlier. The son left legitimate children. Those grandchildren may represent their deceased father and receive the share he would have received.


2. Illegitimate grandchildren

The rights of illegitimate descendants may depend on the relationship and whether representation is allowed under the Civil Code and relevant jurisprudence.

Because of the barrier between legitimate and illegitimate lines, representation issues involving illegitimate descendants should be handled carefully.


XIX. Donations During Lifetime

Inheritance disputes often involve properties transferred before death.

A parent may donate property to one child during lifetime. But if the donation impairs the legitime of compulsory heirs, it may be subject to reduction.

1. Collation

Collation is the process by which certain lifetime donations or advances are brought into account in computing inheritance shares.

If a child received property during the parent’s lifetime, it may be considered an advance on inheritance, depending on the nature of the donation and legal rules.


2. Inofficious Donations

A donation is inofficious if it exceeds what the donor could give by will and impairs the legitime of compulsory heirs.

Example:

A parent gives nearly all property to one legitimate child during lifetime, leaving nothing for other legitimate and illegitimate children. After death, the excluded heirs may question the donation if it impaired their legitime.


3. Sales That Are Actually Donations

Some heirs challenge transactions labeled as “sales” when they believe no real payment was made and the transaction was intended to favor one heir.

If a supposed sale is simulated, fraudulent, or actually a donation, it may be attacked in an estate case or separate civil action.


XX. Disinheritance

A compulsory heir, including a legitimate or illegitimate child, cannot be deprived of legitime except through valid disinheritance.

1. Requirements of Disinheritance

Disinheritance must generally be:

made in a valid will; based on a cause expressly stated by law; stated clearly and specifically; and proven if contested.

A mere statement such as “I do not want my child to inherit” is not enough.


2. Causes for Disinheritance

The Civil Code provides specific grounds for disinheriting children or descendants. These include serious causes such as maltreatment, attempt against the life of the testator, serious accusations, refusal to support, and other legally recognized grounds.

The exact cause must fit the law. Personal anger, favoritism, estrangement, or dislike is not enough.


3. Effect of Invalid Disinheritance

If disinheritance is invalid, the child may still receive legitime.

If the will gave away property that should have gone to the disinherited child, the testamentary dispositions may be annulled or reduced insofar as they impair the child’s rights.


XXI. Preterition

Preterition occurs when a compulsory heir in the direct line is completely omitted in the will.

For example, a parent makes a will giving everything to one child and completely omits another compulsory child.

Preterition can have serious effects on the institution of heirs and may annul the testamentary distribution, subject to legal rules.

Both legitimate and illegitimate compulsory heirs may raise issues when omitted, depending on the facts and applicable doctrine.


XXII. Renunciation or Waiver of Inheritance

An heir may renounce inheritance after the death of the decedent, subject to legal formalities.

However, future inheritance generally cannot be validly waived before the death of the person whose estate is involved, because rights to inherit are generally inchoate before death.

Agreements among children during the parent’s lifetime waiving future inheritance should be treated with caution.


XXIII. Partition Among Heirs

After the estate is determined and debts are paid, heirs may partition the property.

Partition may be:

extrajudicial, if the heirs are all of age, there is no will, there are no debts, and they agree; judicial, if there is disagreement, a will, debts, minors, unknown heirs, or other complications.

An illegitimate child with established filiation and inheritance rights must be included. Excluding such child can make the settlement vulnerable to challenge.


XXIV. Extrajudicial Settlement

An extrajudicial settlement is commonly used in the Philippines when heirs agree on the distribution.

However, it is risky to execute an extrajudicial settlement that excludes a legitimate or illegitimate child.

If an heir was omitted, the settlement may be questioned. The excluded heir may seek reconveyance, annulment, damages, or other remedies depending on the facts.

Before signing, heirs should verify:

all compulsory heirs; civil status of the decedent; children from prior or other relationships; adopted or legitimated children; surviving spouse; property regime; debts; tax obligations; and whether any heir is a minor or incapacitated.


XXV. Estate Tax and Transfer Requirements

Inheritance distribution is not only a family matter. Estate tax and property transfer requirements must also be addressed.

For real property, heirs usually need:

death certificate; proof of relationship; tax identification numbers; estate tax return; certificate authorizing registration; extrajudicial settlement or court order; tax declarations; titles; and payment of transfer taxes and registration fees.

Tax rules may change, so parties should verify current requirements with the Bureau of Internal Revenue and local government offices.


XXVI. Computation Principles

1. First determine the net estate

The distributable estate is generally the net estate after considering debts, charges, and liquidation of property regime.

Do not compute child shares from the gross family assets without separating the surviving spouse’s property share and estate obligations.


2. Identify compulsory heirs

Determine whether the decedent left:

legitimate children; illegitimate children; adopted children; legitimated children; surviving spouse; legitimate parents or ascendants; descendants of predeceased children; and other heirs.


3. Determine whether there is a will

If there is a valid will, compute legitimes first, then apply testamentary dispositions to the free portion.

If there is no will, apply intestate succession.


4. Apply the ratios

When legitimate and illegitimate children inherit together, the working ratio is usually:

Legitimate child = 2 units Illegitimate child = 1 unit

If a surviving spouse concurs with legitimate children, the spouse usually receives a share equal to one legitimate child:

Legitimate child = 2 units Surviving spouse = 2 units Illegitimate child = 1 unit

But this simplification should be checked against legitime rules, the number of illegitimate children, and the presence of other heirs.


XXVII. Detailed Computation Examples

Example 1: Legitimate and illegitimate children only

Estate: ₱12,000,000 Legitimate children: 3 Illegitimate children: 2 No spouse

Ratio:

Each legitimate child = 2 shares Each illegitimate child = 1 share

Total shares:

3 legitimate × 2 = 6 2 illegitimate × 1 = 2 Total = 8

Value per share:

₱12,000,000 ÷ 8 = ₱1,500,000

Each legitimate child:

2 × ₱1,500,000 = ₱3,000,000

Each illegitimate child:

1 × ₱1,500,000 = ₱1,500,000


Example 2: Legitimate children, illegitimate child, and surviving spouse

Estate: ₱9,000,000 Legitimate children: 2 Illegitimate child: 1 Surviving spouse: 1

Ratio:

Each legitimate child = 2 shares Surviving spouse = 2 shares Illegitimate child = 1 share

Total shares:

2 legitimate × 2 = 4 Spouse = 2 Illegitimate = 1 Total = 7

Value per share:

₱9,000,000 ÷ 7 = ₱1,285,714.29

Each legitimate child:

2 × ₱1,285,714.29 = ₱2,571,428.58

Surviving spouse:

2 × ₱1,285,714.29 = ₱2,571,428.58

Illegitimate child:

₱1,285,714.29


Example 3: Illegitimate children and surviving spouse only

Estate: ₱8,000,000 Surviving spouse: 1 Illegitimate children: 4 No legitimate children No legitimate parents

Surviving spouse: ₱4,000,000 Illegitimate children collectively: ₱4,000,000

Each illegitimate child:

₱4,000,000 ÷ 4 = ₱1,000,000


Example 4: Only illegitimate children

Estate: ₱6,000,000 Illegitimate children: 3 No spouse No legitimate children No legitimate parents

Each illegitimate child:

₱6,000,000 ÷ 3 = ₱2,000,000


Example 5: Conjugal property must be liquidated first

Total conjugal property: ₱20,000,000 Husband dies. Surviving wife: 1 Legitimate children: 2 Illegitimate child: 1

Step 1: Liquidate conjugal property.

Wife’s conjugal share: ₱10,000,000 Husband’s estate: ₱10,000,000

Step 2: Divide husband’s estate.

Ratio:

Legitimate child 1 = 2 Legitimate child 2 = 2 Wife as heir = 2 Illegitimate child = 1

Total = 7 shares

Value per share:

₱10,000,000 ÷ 7 = ₱1,428,571.43

Each legitimate child:

2 × ₱1,428,571.43 = ₱2,857,142.86

Wife’s inheritance:

2 × ₱1,428,571.43 = ₱2,857,142.86

Illegitimate child:

₱1,428,571.43

Wife’s total economic receipt:

₱10,000,000 conjugal share + ₱2,857,142.86 inheritance = ₱12,857,142.86


XXVIII. When the Number of Illegitimate Children Is Large

If there are many illegitimate children, their collective legitime may not be allowed to reduce the legitime of legitimate children.

For example, if a deceased parent has one legitimate child and ten illegitimate children, a mechanical 2:1 ratio may create issues if it impairs the legitime reserved for the legitimate child or surviving spouse in a testate computation.

The law gives illegitimate children rights, but those rights are subject to the prior protection of legitimate children’s legitime.

Thus, large-family computations should be handled using formal legitime rules, not mere informal division.


XXIX. Legitimes in Common Situations

The following are broad guideposts.

1. Legitimate children alone

Legitimate children collectively have a reserved legitime, commonly one-half of the hereditary estate, divided equally among them. The free portion may be disposed of by will.

If there is no will, they may inherit the entire estate equally.


2. Legitimate children and surviving spouse

Legitimate children have their legitime. The surviving spouse has a legitime equal to the legitime of one legitimate child, subject to legal rules.

In intestacy, the spouse generally receives a share equal to one legitimate child.


3. Legitimate children and illegitimate children

Illegitimate children have a legitime equal to one-half of the legitime of each legitimate child, provided the legitime of legitimate children is not impaired.


4. Legitimate children, surviving spouse, and illegitimate children

This is the most common blended family situation.

The spouse is treated as having a share comparable to one legitimate child, while each illegitimate child generally receives one-half of a legitimate child’s share, subject to limitations.


5. No legitimate children, but with illegitimate children

Illegitimate children may receive a larger share than they would receive if legitimate children existed, especially if they are the only descendants.


XXX. Legitimate Child Versus Illegitimate Child: Summary of Differences

1. Status

A legitimate child is born or conceived within a valid marriage or has been legitimated or adopted under law.

An illegitimate child is born outside a valid marriage and has not been legitimated, though filiation may be recognized.


2. Share

A legitimate child generally receives twice the share of an illegitimate child when they inherit together from the same parent.


3. Representation

Legitimate descendants generally have broader representation rights within the legitimate family line.

Illegitimate descendants face limitations because of the separation between legitimate and illegitimate lines.


4. Relationship to relatives

Legitimate children may inherit from legitimate relatives according to ordinary rules.

Illegitimate children generally inherit from their own parent but face restrictions in inheriting from the legitimate relatives of that parent by intestacy.


5. Proof

Legitimate children often prove status through the marriage of parents and birth records.

Illegitimate children may need clear proof of filiation, especially if paternity is disputed.


XXXI. Common Disputes

1. “The illegitimate child is not recognized.”

Recognition or proof of filiation is essential. If filiation is not legally established, the alleged illegitimate child may be excluded unless he or she proves the relationship.


2. “The property is in the name of the surviving spouse.”

Title alone may not fully determine ownership. The property regime, source of funds, and date of acquisition matter.


3. “The parent already gave property to that child.”

That may be an advance, donation, sale, or separate transaction. It may need collation or reduction if it affects legitime.


4. “The child was born from an affair, so the child should get nothing.”

This is incorrect. Illegitimate children have inheritance rights from their parents if filiation is established.


5. “The legitimate family can exclude the illegitimate child.”

Not if the illegitimate child’s filiation and inheritance rights are established. Exclusion can lead to legal challenges.


6. “The will says only legitimate children inherit.”

A will cannot impair the legitime of an illegitimate compulsory heir unless there is valid disinheritance.


7. “The illegitimate child used a different surname.”

Surname is relevant but not conclusive. Filiation depends on legally accepted evidence.


8. “The father supported the child, so inheritance is automatic.”

Support may be evidence of recognition, but inheritance still depends on legally established filiation.


XXXII. Practical Steps for Heirs

For legitimate children

Verify the complete list of heirs before settling the estate. Do not ignore known illegitimate children. Check the property regime of the deceased. Review prior donations and transfers. Settle estate tax and documentation properly. Avoid signing false affidavits of sole heirship.


For illegitimate children

Gather proof of filiation early. Secure birth certificates, written acknowledgments, messages, documents, school records, insurance records, photos, and proof of support. Participate in estate settlement proceedings. Object promptly if excluded. Consult counsel if other heirs deny recognition.


For surviving spouses

Separate your own property share from the estate. Identify all children of the deceased, including those outside the marriage. Avoid transferring or selling estate property without proper settlement. Remember that your inheritance share is separate from your conjugal or community share.


For parents making estate plans

Execute a valid will if you want clarity. Respect legitimes of all compulsory heirs. Avoid informal promises. Document donations properly. Consider estate tax implications. Recognize children properly if intended. Do not rely on verbal family arrangements.


XXXIII. Estate Planning for Families with Legitimate and Illegitimate Children

Estate planning is especially important in blended families.

A parent may reduce conflict by:

making a valid will; clearly identifying compulsory heirs; documenting properties; avoiding simulated sales; making fair and lawful donations; recognizing children in legally effective documents where appropriate; keeping records of advances; updating beneficiary designations; and explaining arrangements privately when possible.

However, no estate plan should violate legitime rules.


XXXIV. Can a Parent Give Everything to Legitimate Children?

Not if there are illegitimate children who are compulsory heirs and whose filiation is established.

A parent may favor legitimate children using the free portion, but cannot lawfully deprive illegitimate children of their legitime except through valid disinheritance.


XXXV. Can a Parent Give Everything to an Illegitimate Child?

Not if doing so impairs the legitime of legitimate children, surviving spouse, or other compulsory heirs.

The illegitimate child may receive the free portion and his or her legitime, but compulsory shares of other heirs must be respected.


XXXVI. Can Legitimate Children Refuse to Recognize an Illegitimate Child?

They may contest filiation if there is a valid basis. But they cannot simply refuse recognition for emotional, moral, or social reasons.

If the illegitimate child has legally sufficient proof, he or she may assert inheritance rights.


XXXVII. Can an Illegitimate Child Inherit from Both Parents?

Yes. An illegitimate child may inherit from the mother and from the father, provided filiation with each parent is established.

Maternal filiation is usually easier to prove through birth records. Paternal filiation may be disputed more often, especially if acknowledgment is absent.


XXXVIII. Can an Illegitimate Child Inherit from Grandparents?

Generally, the illegitimate child’s intestate inheritance rights are limited by the separation between legitimate and illegitimate family lines.

An illegitimate child may inherit from his or her own parent. Inheriting from grandparents, especially legitimate relatives of the parent, involves technical rules and limitations.

A grandparent may still provide for an illegitimate grandchild through a valid will or donation, subject to the legitime of compulsory heirs.


XXXIX. Effect of Annulment, Nullity, and Void Marriages

Children’s status may be affected by the validity of the parents’ marriage and the specific rules under the Family Code.

Children of void or voidable marriages may have different status depending on the ground for nullity, the timing of birth, and special rules protecting certain children.

This affects inheritance because a child’s classification as legitimate, illegitimate, or legitimated determines his or her share.

Legal advice is important when the parents’ marriage was annulled, declared void, bigamous, or otherwise defective.


XL. Effect of Legal Separation

Legal separation does not dissolve the marriage. Children of the marriage remain legitimate.

A legally separated spouse may still have inheritance rights unless disqualified under the Civil Code, a valid will, or other legal grounds. However, the guilty spouse may face consequences under family and succession law.


XLI. Effect of Bigamous or Subsequent Marriages

If a parent had children from a later marriage that is void because of a prior existing marriage, the status of those children must be examined under the Family Code.

Some children of void marriages are illegitimate, while certain children are treated as legitimate under specific legal provisions.

Their inheritance shares depend on their legally determined status.


XLII. Settlement When Some Heirs Are Abroad

Heirs abroad may participate through consularized or apostilled special powers of attorney, affidavits, deeds of extrajudicial settlement, or court proceedings.

An illegitimate child abroad should not be excluded if filiation and heirship are established.


XLIII. Settlement When an Heir Is a Minor

If a legitimate or illegitimate child is a minor, additional safeguards apply.

A parent or guardian may not freely compromise or dispose of the minor’s inheritance rights without complying with legal requirements. Court approval may be necessary in certain cases.

Extrajudicial settlements involving minors should be handled carefully.


XLIV. Prescription and Laches

Inheritance claims may be affected by prescription, laches, and procedural deadlines.

An excluded child should not delay asserting rights. The longer the delay, the more difficult it may become to recover property, challenge settlements, prove filiation, or undo transfers to third persons.


XLV. Remedies of an Excluded Child

A legitimate or illegitimate child excluded from inheritance may consider:

opposition in estate proceedings; petition for settlement of estate; action for partition; action for reconveyance; action to annul extrajudicial settlement; action to reduce inofficious donations; action to establish filiation, if still allowed; claim for legitime; damages; and other remedies depending on the facts.

The proper remedy depends on whether the estate has been settled, whether property has been sold, whether titles have been transferred, whether filiation is disputed, and whether deadlines have passed.


XLVI. Frequently Asked Questions

1. Do legitimate and illegitimate children inherit equally?

Not usually when they inherit together from the same parent. The usual rule is that an illegitimate child receives one-half of the share of a legitimate child.


2. What is the simple ratio between legitimate and illegitimate children?

The common ratio is:

Legitimate child = 2 Illegitimate child = 1

If a surviving spouse concurs with legitimate children, the spouse is often treated like one legitimate child in intestate sharing.


3. Does an illegitimate child have inheritance rights?

Yes, if filiation is legally established.


4. Can legitimate children exclude an illegitimate child?

No, not if the illegitimate child has established filiation and is legally entitled to inherit.


5. Can a will remove an illegitimate child from inheritance?

Not by mere omission or preference. The illegitimate child is a compulsory heir and is entitled to legitime unless validly disinherited for a legal cause.


6. Is a birth certificate enough for an illegitimate child to inherit?

It may be enough if it contains legally sufficient acknowledgment, such as the parent’s signature or admission. If not, additional evidence may be needed.


7. What if the father never signed the birth certificate?

The child may need other legally admissible proof of filiation. The available remedy may depend on whether the father is alive and whether the action is filed within the allowed period.


8. Can an illegitimate child inherit from the mother?

Yes. Maternal filiation is usually easier to prove, and illegitimate children have inheritance rights from their mother.


9. Can a parent give more to an illegitimate child?

Yes, through the free portion, as long as the legitime of compulsory heirs is not impaired.


10. What if the deceased left no will?

The estate is distributed by intestate succession. Legitimate children, illegitimate children, and the surviving spouse inherit according to the Civil Code rules.


11. What if all property was transferred before death?

The transfers may still be examined. If they were donations, simulated sales, fraudulent transfers, or inofficious dispositions impairing legitime, heirs may challenge them.


12. Does the surviving spouse automatically own everything?

No. The surviving spouse may own a share of conjugal or community property and may inherit from the deceased, but children also have inheritance rights.


13. What happens if the illegitimate child is not known until after settlement?

The child may challenge the settlement if legally allowed and if filiation can be proven. The result depends on timing, evidence, transfers, and prescription.


14. Can heirs agree to a different division?

After death, heirs may agree to a partition, compromise, or waiver, subject to legal formalities and protection of minors or incapacitated heirs. Before death, future inheritance generally cannot be freely waived.


15. Is moral blame relevant?

No. The circumstances of conception do not erase the child’s legal rights. Philippine law gives illegitimate children inheritance rights from their parents.


XLVII. Common Mistakes to Avoid

Computing shares from the gross family property without liquidating the marriage property regime.

Ignoring the surviving spouse’s conjugal or community share.

Assuming illegitimate children get nothing.

Assuming illegitimate children always inherit equally with legitimate children.

Excluding children from another relationship.

Relying only on verbal agreements.

Executing an affidavit of sole heirship despite known compulsory heirs.

Selling estate property without settlement.

Failing to pay estate tax.

Failing to check if there is a will.

Failing to account for lifetime donations.

Failing to establish filiation promptly.

Assuming a title in one person’s name proves exclusive ownership.


XLVIII. Key Takeaways

Legitimate and illegitimate children are both recognized heirs under Philippine succession law.

When legitimate and illegitimate children inherit together, each illegitimate child generally receives one-half of the share of each legitimate child.

The common ratio is:

Legitimate child : Illegitimate child = 2 : 1

If a surviving spouse also inherits with legitimate children, the common working ratio is:

Legitimate child : Surviving spouse : Illegitimate child = 2 : 2 : 1

Before computing inheritance, the estate must first be determined by separating the surviving spouse’s conjugal or community share and deducting obligations.

An illegitimate child must establish filiation to inherit.

A will cannot impair the legitime of legitimate or illegitimate compulsory heirs unless there is valid disinheritance.

Lifetime donations, simulated sales, and unequal transfers may be challenged if they impair legitime.

Excluding an illegitimate child from estate settlement can lead to annulment, reconveyance, partition, damages, or other legal remedies.

Inheritance disputes involving legitimate and illegitimate children are fact-sensitive and should be handled carefully.


Conclusion

Philippine inheritance law protects both legitimate and illegitimate children, but it does not always give them equal shares. The legitimate child generally receives twice the share of the illegitimate child when they inherit together from the same parent. The surviving spouse may also receive a share, and the final computation depends on the estate, property regime, presence of a will, number and status of heirs, prior donations, and proof of filiation.

The most important practical rule is to compute carefully before dividing property. Identify all heirs, determine the true estate, respect legitimes, verify filiation, account for the surviving spouse’s property rights, and settle the estate properly. Failure to include a rightful child, whether legitimate or illegitimate, can make the settlement vulnerable to serious legal challenge.

This article is for general legal information and should not be treated as legal advice for a specific case.

Disclaimer: This content is not legal advice and may involve AI assistance. Information may be inaccurate.