An Estate Plan with Good Intentions
Apparently even the smartest people can cause havoc for their families without a well thought out estate plan in place. Albert Einstein, the famed physicist who was crowned Time magazine’s person of the century in 1999, generously bequeathed the literary rights for the more than 75,000 papers and other items in his estate to the Hebrew University of Jerusalem when he died in 1955. But now his granddaughter, Evelyn, is claiming foul after the university refused to share in profits resulting from his estate.
The Israeli university also owns the rights to Einstein’s likeness, using a Los Angeles-based company called Greenlight, LLC to handle licensing for items such as Einstein apparel, mugs, puzzles, coins, posters and other collectibles. It’s pretty doubtful that Einstein ever thought he would one day be a bobblehead doll or Halloween mask, but his image continues to generate millions of dollars each year.
Albert Einstein’s Family and Descendants Today
Many wonder about Albert Einstein’s descendants and what happened to his family. Einstein had two sons with his first wife, Mileva Marić: Hans Albert Einstein and Eduard Einstein. Eduard Einstein struggled with mental illness and spent much of his life in a psychiatric institution in Switzerland, where he died in 1965.
Hans Albert Einstein became a successful engineer and had four children, including Bernhard Caesar Einstein. Today, Einstein’s great-grandchildren include several living descendants, though they maintain relatively private lives. The Einstein family lineage continues, with several great-grandchildren and great-great-grandchildren alive in 2025.
As for Albert Einstein’s net worth, he left behind an estate valued at approximately $1.2 million in 1955 (about $13 million in today’s dollars). However, the ongoing licensing of his image and name through the Hebrew University generates millions annually none of which benefits his direct descendants due to his estate planning choices.
Estate Plans Should be Flexible
Einstein’s granddaughter, on the other hand, is a 69-year-old cancer survivor who needs money for health care. She says she hasn’t received a dime from the marketing and sales of merchandise, and doesn’t understand what a bobblehead has to do with Einstein’s literary estate.
She claims she has been ignored by the university in her requests for an arrangement that would allow her to profit from the sales. The school has responded saying that Einstein left all of his intellectual property, including the rights to the use of his image, to the university.
Einstein’s Living Descendants and Family Legacy
Evelyn Einstein, mentioned above, was one of Hans Albert Einstein’s children. While there are living descendants of Albert Einstein today, including great-grandchildren and great-great-grandchildren, most have chosen to stay out of the public eye. Unlike their famous ancestor, Einstein’s descendants receive no financial benefit from the continued commercial use of his name and likeness a direct result of how his estate was structured in his will.
Quite a sad state of affairs: by nobly contributing to the university in his will, Einstein unknowingly left his own family unable to reap any benefit from his continued economic success. Perhaps if he had he spent a little more time on his estate plan and a little less time pondering relativity, he could have set up a trust for future generations of his family while still donating to his preferred cause. It just goes to show that a good estate plan should be flexible enough to manage tomorrow’s uncertainties while protecting your family.