Probate in New York is the Surrogate’s Court process of proving a will valid and authorizing an executor to administer the estate. For the literal “New York” — New York County, Manhattan — it runs through the Surrogate’s Court at 31 Chambers Street and follows the Surrogate’s Court Procedure Act (SCPA). A straightforward, uncontested New York County estate typically takes about 8 to 14 months; high-value or contested estates run longer. The petition under SCPA 1402 is the formal start.
Because this site disambiguates “New York,” note the venue rule first: you probate in the county where the decedent was domiciled at death (SCPA 205), not where the property sits. A Manhattan domiciliary who owned a house upstate is still probated at 31 Chambers Street. If the decedent was domiciled in Brooklyn or Queens, that borough’s court — not Manhattan — has venue.
How long does probate take in New York County?
For an uncontested estate with a valid, self-proved will and cooperative distributees, plan on roughly 8 to 14 months from filing to final distribution in New York County. The court’s high caseload, the seven-month creditor window, and any estate-tax filing all stretch the timeline. Add a will contest or an SCPA 1404 examination, and a matter can run two years or more.
Step-by-step: New York probate
- Locate the original will and confirm domicile. The court needs the signed original, not a copy. Domicile fixes venue under SCPA 205. No will means administration rather than probate.
- Prepare the probate petition (SCPA 1402). The nominated executor petitions the New York County Surrogate’s Court, listing the decedent, the will, the distributees, and the estate’s approximate value.
- Identify and notify the distributees. Everyone who would inherit under intestacy (EPTL 4-1.1) must be named. Each either signs a waiver and consent or is served with a citation to appear.
- File supporting documents. The original will, a certified death certificate, the petition, and — where heirs are unclear — a family-tree (kinship) affidavit.
- The court admits the will and issues letters testamentary. Letters testamentary are the court order proving the executor’s authority to act for the estate. (No will: letters of administration.)
- Marshal the assets. The executor collects bank and brokerage accounts, secures real property, and — common in Manhattan — coordinates with co-op boards to transfer the decedent’s shares and proprietary lease.
- Notify creditors and pay valid debts. Creditors generally have seven months from the issuance of letters to present claims (SCPA 1802); the executor pays in the statutory priority order.
- File tax returns. A New York estate-tax return is required if the estate exceeds the NY exemption (watch the 105% “cliff”); a federal return if it exceeds the federal exemption.
- Distribute to beneficiaries. After debts and taxes, the executor distributes per the will.
- Account and close. The executor settles the estate by informal accounting (beneficiaries sign releases) or a judicial accounting before the Surrogate.
Required documents checklist
- Original signed will (and any codicils)
- Certified death certificate
- Probate petition (SCPA 1402)
- List of distributees with addresses
- Family-tree / kinship affidavit where heirship is unclear
- Self-proving affidavit (or testimony of attesting witnesses if none)
Filing fees in New York (SCPA 2402)
The Surrogate’s Court filing fee for a probate petition is graduated by the value of the estate under SCPA 2402. The brackets below reflect the long-standing statutory schedule — verify the current figure with the court, as fees are periodically adjusted.
| Estate value (less than) | Filing fee (verify current) |
|---|---|
| $10,000 | $45 |
| $20,000 | $75 |
| $50,000 | $215 |
| $100,000 | $280 |
| $250,000 | $625 |
| $500,000 | $625 |
| $500,000 or more | $1,250 |
Where to file in New York County
For a Manhattan domiciliary, file at the New York County Surrogate’s Court, 31 Chambers Street, New York, NY 10007 — the 1907 Hall of Records at Chambers and Centre Streets. The Help Center (Room 302, verify) assists self-represented petitioners, and NYSCEF e-filing is available for many matter types. If the decedent was domiciled in another borough or county, file there instead — see the Surrogate’s Court page.
Probate vs. administration
Probate applies when there is a valid will: the named executor is appointed. Administration applies when there is no will: the court appoints an administrator by statutory priority (SCPA 1001), and the estate passes under EPTL 4-1.1 intestacy. The mechanics overlap, but the petitions and the authority differ.
When the small-estate shortcut applies
If the decedent’s personal property (excluding real estate that passes by the will) is under $50,000, the estate may qualify for voluntary administration under SCPA Article 13 — a simplified, lower-cost filing handled by a “voluntary administrator.” It does not transfer real property, which matters less in co-op-heavy Manhattan, where the apartment is personal property (shares) rather than real estate.
Frequently asked questions
Do I file probate where the decedent died or where they lived? Where they were domiciled (SCPA 205). A Manhattan resident who died in a Long Island hospital is still probated in New York County.
Can I probate a copy of the will? Generally no; the court requires the original. A lost-will proceeding under SCPA 1407 has higher proof burdens.
Who can serve as executor? The person nominated in the will, unless disqualified (e.g., a felon or someone the court finds unfit) under SCPA 707.
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