Probate Process Explained: What Actually Happens in Probate Court



Everyone talks about avoiding probate — but most people don’t actually know what probate is. They’ve heard it’s bad. They know it’s expensive. Maybe a friend warned them, or an attorney’s ad scared them. But the details? The actual process? What a family really goes through? That part’s usually a blur.

Here’s what probate actually looks like — step by step, in plain language. Not because I want to scare you into getting a trust (though you probably should look into one), but because understanding what probate involves is the only honest way to decide whether it’s worth avoiding for your family.

Already know you want to avoid probate? Head to our complete guide to avoiding probate for all your options. This page is the deep dive into what happens when there’s no plan in place.


What Is Probate?

Probate is the court-supervised legal process that happens when someone dies with assets in their name alone. A judge oversees the process of validating the will (if there is one), identifying and valuing assets, paying debts, and distributing what’s left to the rightful heirs or beneficiaries.

If the person had a will, probate carries out the will’s instructions — under court supervision. If there was no will, probate follows your state’s intestacy laws — a statutory formula that determines who inherits what based on family relationships. Either way, a judge controls the process from start to finish.

The word “probate” comes from the Latin probare — to prove. Originally, it meant proving that a will was valid. Over time, it came to mean the entire process of settling a deceased person’s estate through the court system.


The Probate Process: Step by Step

The specifics vary by state — some states have streamlined their process, others still use procedures that haven’t changed in decades. But the general framework is similar almost everywhere.

Step 1: File the petition

Someone — usually the person named as executor in the will, or a family member if there’s no will — files a petition with the probate court in the county where the deceased person lived. This petition asks the court to open a probate case and appoint a personal representative (executor) to manage the estate.

If there’s a will, the original must be filed with the court. Some states require this within a specific timeframe — commonly 30 days after death.

Step 2: Court appoints the executor

The court reviews the petition, confirms the will is valid (or appoints an administrator if there’s no will), and formally appoints the personal representative. The court issues letters testamentary (with a will) or letters of administration (without a will) — official documents that give the executor legal authority to act on behalf of the estate.

This step alone can take weeks to months, depending on the court’s schedule. If anyone contests the appointment — a disgruntled family member, a different person named in the will — it takes longer.

Step 3: Notify heirs and creditors

The executor must formally notify all potential heirs and beneficiaries that probate has been opened. In most states, the executor must also publish a notice to creditors in a local newspaper — yes, an actual newspaper — giving anyone the deceased owed money to a chance to file a claim. Creditor claim periods typically run 3 to 6 months from the date of publication, depending on the state.

This is one of the reasons probate takes so long. You can’t distribute assets until the creditor period expires, because you need to know what debts exist before you can determine what’s left.

Step 4: Inventory and appraise assets

The executor identifies, locates, and values every asset the deceased owned. This inventory is filed with the court — and in most states, it becomes a public document. That means anyone can look up exactly what your parent owned: the house, the bank balances, the investment accounts, the cars, everything.

Real estate typically requires a formal appraisal. Other assets may need professional valuation (businesses, collectibles, unusual property). This process takes time and costs money.

Step 5: Pay debts, taxes, and expenses

Before any beneficiary receives anything, the estate’s debts must be paid. This includes:

  • Final medical bills
  • Credit card balances
  • Mortgages and loans
  • Funeral expenses
  • Income taxes (a final return for the deceased)
  • Estate taxes (if applicable — federal and/or state)
  • Probate costs (court fees, attorney fees, executor fees, appraisals, publication costs)

If the estate doesn’t have enough liquid assets to cover debts, assets may need to be sold. The house might need to go on the market. Investment accounts might be liquidated. All of this happens under court supervision and takes time.

Step 6: Distribute remaining assets

After all debts and expenses are paid and the creditor claim period has expired, the executor petitions the court for permission to distribute the remaining assets to the beneficiaries named in the will — or to the heirs determined by intestacy law if there’s no will.

The court reviews the accounting, confirms everything is in order, and authorizes the distribution. Only then does the family actually receive their inheritance.

Step 7: Close the estate

The executor files a final accounting with the court showing all assets received, debts paid, expenses incurred, and distributions made. The court reviews and approves the accounting, and the estate is formally closed. The executor is released from their duties.


How Long Does Probate Take?

The honest answer: it depends on your state and your situation. But here’s a realistic range:

SituationTypical TimelineWhat Drives It
Simple estate, no disputes, cooperative family6-12 monthsCreditor period + court scheduling
Average estate with a home and financial accounts12-18 monthsReal estate sale + tax filings + court reviews
Complex estate or family disputes18 months – 3+ yearsContested will, multiple properties, business interests, litigation
States with notoriously slow probate courts18-24+ months even for simple casesCourt backlogs, mandatory waiting periods, statutory fee structures

Some states have made real progress in streamlining probate. Others — California is a common example — have processes that are slow and expensive almost by design, with statutory attorney fees based on the gross estate value (not the net value after mortgages).

During the entire probate process, the family typically cannot access the assets. The bank accounts are frozen. The house can’t be sold without court approval. If a surviving spouse or dependent children need money, they may have to petition the court for a family allowance — a process that adds more delays.


How Much Does Probate Cost?

Probate costs typically run 2% to 7% of the gross estate value, depending on the state and the complexity of the case. For a $500,000 estate, that’s $10,000 to $35,000 in costs that come directly out of what the family inherits.

Those costs include:

  • Court filing fees — a few hundred to a few thousand dollars, depending on the state
  • Attorney fees — often the largest expense. Some states set fees by statute (California charges a percentage of the gross estate). Others use hourly billing, which can add up quickly for contested or complex estates.
  • Executor/administrator fees — many states allow the executor to take a percentage of the estate as compensation. Even when a family member serves and waives their fee, there are still costs.
  • Appraisal and accounting fees — professional valuations, CPA services for tax returns, and formal accountings for the court.
  • Publication and mailing costs — the newspaper notice, certified mailings to creditors and heirs.
  • Bond premium — some courts require the executor to post a surety bond, especially if there’s no will or the will doesn’t waive the bond requirement.

All of these costs come out of the estate — meaning the family inherits less. And because they’re based on the gross value of the estate (not net of debts), a family with a $500,000 house and a $400,000 mortgage pays probate fees on $500,000, not $100,000.


The Privacy Problem

This is the part that catches families off guard. When a will goes through probate, it becomes a public court record. So does the inventory of assets, the list of beneficiaries, and the accounting of distributions. Anyone can access this information — a nosy neighbor, a scammer targeting bereaved families, a disgruntled relative, a journalist.

You can literally look up probate filings in most counties online or in person at the courthouse. How much your parent’s house was worth, how much was in their bank accounts, who got what — it’s all there.

For some families, this doesn’t matter much. For others — especially those with significant assets, complex family dynamics, or privacy concerns — it’s a serious issue. A living trust avoids this entirely because there’s no court filing, no public record, and no one outside the family needs to know the details.


When Probate Is Unavoidable

Not everything can avoid probate. Even with a well-planned estate, probate may be necessary for:

  • Assets that weren’t in the trust. If your parent had a trust but forgot to retitle an asset, that asset goes through probate — usually via a pour-over will.
  • Estates with no planning at all. If there’s no will and no trust, everything goes through probate under intestacy laws. (Here’s what happens when parents don’t plan.)
  • Will contests or disputes. If someone challenges the will’s validity, probate court is where that fight happens.
  • Certain assets by law. Some types of claims (like wrongful death settlements) may need to go through probate regardless of other planning.

Small estate shortcuts

Most states offer simplified procedures for small estates — affidavit processes, summary administration, or expedited probate for estates below a certain dollar threshold. These thresholds vary dramatically by state, from as low as $10,000 to as high as $200,000+. If the estate qualifies, the process can be significantly faster and cheaper — sometimes completed in weeks rather than months.

Check your state’s specific thresholds. In some states, “small estate” means smaller than you’d think. In others, a surprising number of estates qualify for the streamlined process.


Probate vs. Trust Administration: The Full Picture

FactorProbate (Will or No Will)Trust Administration
Court involved?Yes — judge supervises every stepNo — trustee acts independently
Timeline6 months to 3+ yearsWeeks to 6 months typically
Cost2-7% of gross estateAttorney fees + accounting (usually lower)
PrivacyFully public recordCompletely private
Multiple statesSeparate probate in each stateOne administration covers all
Family access during processAssets frozen until court approvesTrustee can manage and distribute sooner
Contest/disputesHandled in probate courtCan be litigated but less common

The Bottom Line

Probate isn’t evil. It exists for a reason — to make sure a deceased person’s wishes are followed and their debts are paid. But it’s slow, expensive, and public in ways that most families don’t need or want.

The families who go through probate and wish they hadn’t almost always say the same thing: “We didn’t think it would be this complicated” or “We didn’t know it would take this long.” Now you know.

If you’re reading this and your family hasn’t planned yet — it’s not too late. A living trust avoids this entire process for the assets inside it. The cost of setting one up is a fraction of what probate costs. And your family gets their inheritance in weeks, not years.

Your parents worked too hard for probate court to decide what happens next.

Where are you in this journey?

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