Paul Walker has left his entire estate to his 15-year-old daughter.
The Associated Press reported that the actor, who died on Nov. 30 in a car crash in Los Angeles County, has left his $25 million estate to his only child, Meadow Walker.
The "Fast and Furious" star's final will and testament was filed in a Los Angeles court on Tuesday. According to court documents, the actor named his father, Paul Walker, Sr. as executor of the estate and his mother, Cheryl, as guardian of Meadow.
The court papers, which were obtained by TMZ, also showed that the actor left nothing for his 23-year-old girlfriend Jasmine Pilchard-Gosnell or his other family members.
The AP reported that the will was made and signed in 2001, the same year the 40-year-old actor starred in the first "Fast & Furious" film.
Walker was filming the seventh installment of the successful franchise when he was killed along with driver, friend and financial adviser, Roger Rodas. The car burst into flames after colliding with a light pole and tree.
Walker's wealth doesn't just come from films. It also comes from personal property, worth $8 million, and a home worth $10 million. In December, the actor's father opened up to E! News about how his granddaughter was doing after the loss of her father.
"Meadow's taking it really tough, but there again, she has family around her and some very, very loving friends and everybody they're all close," he told E!. "There's a lot of hugging. A lot of hand-holding. Wonderful people coming telling us how sorry they are."
The New York Daily News reported that days before his death, Walker told friends that he was the happy since his daughter, who grew up in Hawaii with her mother, Rebecca Soteros, began living with him.
"We're matching up sweet!" Walker told reporters. "She's been with her mom her whole life and she wants a relationship with her pops. It's working out really well right now."
After her father's death, Meadow called her father "My REAL life hero!" in a Facebook post.
"When I was little he taught me to walk, taught me to smile and taught me to never give up," Meadow wrote. "I loved him even before I knew what love was."