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How Much Does Probate Cost by State?
Research18 min read

How Much Does Probate Cost by State?

Court filing fees, small-estate limits, executor pay, and creditor periods across all 50 states for 2026, from state statutes and court fee schedules, plus Settled's own attorney-fee estimates.

By Evan Reid

Probate is the court-supervised process that transfers a deceased person's assets to heirs and pays valid creditor claims. There is no federal probate system, so what it costs, and how long it takes, is decided state by state. The spread is wide: a court filing fee runs from $30 in New Mexico to $750 in Rhode Island, attorney fees follow a statutory or presumed schedule in seven states, and the mandatory creditor period that keeps an estate open ranges from three months in Florida to a full year in Pennsylvania.

This study compiles probate costs across all 50 states for 2026. It covers court filing fees, small-estate thresholds, and estimated attorney fees for every state, plus executor compensation rules and creditor claim periods for the 22 states where Settled Estate maintains a full verified dataset. Filing fees and statutory thresholds come from state statutes and county court fee schedules. Attorney-fee ranges are Settled Estate estimates produced by one consistent method, explained in the methodology below. They are not quotes for any specific estate.

A boundary first: Settled Estate is not a law firm and this report is not legal advice. Statutes change, several dollar thresholds adjust for inflation, and the cost of any estate depends on its facts. Use this as a map, then confirm the current rule for your state before you rely on it. For your specific situation, consult a probate attorney. Settled Estate also offers paid probate-guidance plans; we publish this study as a free, fully sourced resource, and every figure here is yours to use whether or not you ever work with us.

Key findings

  • The median court filing fee across all 50 states is about $233. The lowest is New Mexico at $30; the highest typical figure is Rhode Island at $750, which scales its fee to estate value and is shown here at a representative estate of about $150,000 (a smaller Rhode Island estate pays far less, down to a $30 minimum). Because that high end is a value-scaled fee and the low end is a flat one, treat the spread as an order of magnitude, not a precise multiple.
  • The filing fee is almost never the real cost. Across the board it is the smallest line item. Attorney fees, executor compensation, and the time an estate must stay open drive the total.
  • Seven states set ordinary attorney fees by a statutory or presumed schedule: California, Florida, Arkansas, Nevada, Iowa, Missouri, and Wyoming. The mechanics vary (California's is a fixed fee, Iowa's a cap, Missouri's a floor a court can exceed, Florida's is a presumed-reasonable schedule, and Nevada's, Arkansas's, and Wyoming's are schedules a court approves or adjusts), but in any of them a large estate can generate a fee far above what hourly counsel would charge elsewhere, and in California the attorney and the executor are each paid on the same schedule.
  • Executor pay splits the country in two. Among the 22 states we cover in full, 14 set it by a statutory percentage or cap you can calculate up front; the other 8 use a "reasonable compensation" standard with no fixed formula.
  • Time is a cost. Among the 22 states we cover in full, most keep an estate open for a creditor claim period of 3 to 4 months, but it runs longer in several: 6 months in Alabama, Arkansas, and Ohio, 7 in New York, 8 in South Carolina, and 12 in Pennsylvania. An estate generally cannot close and distribute until that window runs.
  • The small-estate shortcut is the biggest lever, when it applies. Most states let estates below a threshold (from around $15,000 to as much as $400,000 in Wyoming) skip formal probate entirely. But most of these thresholds cover personal property only and exclude real estate, so the shortcut often does not help when an inherited house is the main asset; only a few states offer a separate real-property procedure.

Bar chart ranking all 50 states by the typical court filing fee to open probate in 2026, from $30 in New Mexico to $750 in Rhode Island. Source: Settled Estate.

Typical court filing fee to open probate, 2026. The fee alone ranges roughly 25x across states, yet it is still the smallest part of the total cost. Free to republish with attribution (embed code below).

All 50 states: probate cost table

Sort or search the table for any state. These are statewide figures; for the current, county-level filing fee, follow the link in each row to that state's fee calculator.

Settled guide
Alabama$45-$175Base statewide $45 under Ala. Code § 12-19-90; county local-act charges increase the total in many counties. Varies by county.$47,000$2,500-$6,250 (est.)Cost calculator
Alaska$250Statewide uniform fee of $250 to commence a probate estate in Superior Court (Alaska Administrative Rule 9, eff. January 1, 2018). Same in every judicial district.$50,000$3,250-$8,250 (est.)Data only
Arizona$149Statewide base $149 per petition (A.R.S. § 12-284); county add-ons vary (Maricopa $306+ observed). Varies by county.$200,000$3,250-$8,000 (est.)Cost calculator
Arkansas$165Uniform statewide: $150 base (Ark. Code § 21-6-403(b)(1)) plus $15 court technology fee (§ 21-6-416).$100,000Statutory %Cost calculator
California$435Petition for probate filing fee, uniform statewide (Gov. Code 70650).$208,850Statutory %Cost calculator
Colorado$229$199 docket fee plus $30 equal justice fee (eff. January 1, 2025) per C.R.S. § 13-32-102(1)(b), (7). Statewide.$88,000$3,250-$8,000 (est.)Cost calculator
Connecticut$150-$40,000Statewide value-based scale under CGS 45a-107: $150 minimum for full estate under $10,000; $150 plus 0.35% of value over $10,000 for estates from $10,000 to $500,000 (e.g., $640 for a $150,000 estate); $1,865 plus 0.25% above $500,000; capped at $40,000. Same in every probate district.$40,000$4,000-$10,250 (est.)Data only
Delaware$25-$1,400County-set fees by Register of Wills (12 Del. C. § 2510). New Castle County (largest): $25 (under $30,000 estate), $50 ($30,000-$99,999), $75 ($100,000-$499,999), rising to $1,400+ for estates over $500,000. Varies by county.$50,000$4,750-$12,000 (est.)Data only
Florida$232-$401Statutory, uniform across all 67 counties. $401 formal administration, $346 summary administration over $1,000.$75,000Statutory %Cost calculator
Georgia$175-$215Uniform $175 statutory petition fee (O.C.G.A. § 15-9-60, eff. January 1, 2025); county add-ons bring observed totals to about $206 to $215. Varies by county.$15,000$3,750-$9,250 (est.)Cost calculator
Hawaii$100Statewide uniform fee of $100 per decedent estate for probate, administration, domiciliary foreign personal representative, or ancillary administration (HRS 607-5(b)(14)). Paid once per decedent regardless of estate size. Same in every county.$100,000$3,500-$8,500 (est.)Data only
Idaho$166Statewide uniform fee of $166 to commence an informal probate proceeding in the magistrate division of the district court (I.R.C.P. Appendix A, eff. July 12, 2024). Same in every county.$100,000$3,000-$7,750 (est.)Data only
Illinois$250-$479County-set fees; statutory base $100 plus county surcharges (705 ILCS 105/27.1b). Cook County $479; other counties typically $250 to $400. Varies by county.$150,000$3,500-$8,750 (est.)Data only
Indiana$120Statewide uniform probate costs fee of $120 per action filed under probate (IC 29) or trusts and fiduciaries (IC 30) (IC 33-37-4-7(a)). Same in all 92 Indiana counties.$100,000$3,000-$7,250 (est.)Data only
Iowa$495Iowa court costs combine two charges: (1) civil filing and docketing fee under Iowa Code § 602.8105(1)(a), $195 in most counties ($200 in counties with population of 98,000 or more); plus (2) estate-specific probate cost supplement of 0.2% of probate inventory value under Iowa Code § 633.31 (eff. January 1, 2022, for deaths on or after January 1, 2022). $495 shown for a typical $150,000 net probate estate ($195 + $300). Statewide formula; no county variation.$50,000Statutory %Data only
Kansas$110Statewide uniform docket fee of $109.50 for probate of an estate or of a will under K.S.A. 59-104. The additional $22 non-judicial personnel surcharge authorized July 1, 2019 through June 30, 2025 has expired. Same in every Kansas county.$75,000$3,000-$7,750 (est.)Data only
Kentucky$173Statewide uniform fee set by Supreme Court of Kentucky under authority of KRS 24A.170: $172.50 to open an estate with a will; $125.50 without a will. Same in every Kentucky District Court. These fees increase effective July 1, 2026 per Supreme Court Administrative Order 2026-15.$30,000$2,500-$6,250 (est.)Data only
Louisiana$250-$600Per-parish court-cost deposit; no statewide fee formula. Each parish Clerk of Court sets its own advance deposit (La. R.S. 13:841 caps maximums). Varies by parish.$125,000$2,750-$6,750 (est.)Cost calculator
Maine$40-$1,200Statewide value-based scale under 18-C M.R.S. §1-602: $40 for estates $10,000 and under; scales up to $325 for the $100,001-$150,000 bracket; $1,200 for the $1,000,001-$1,500,000 bracket; above $2,000,000: $1,200 plus $250 per additional $500,000 increment. $325 shown for a typical $150,000 estate. Same in every Maine Probate Court.$51,100$2,500-$6,250 (est.)Data only
Maryland$0-$10,000Value-based statewide scale under Md. Code, Estates and Trusts §2-206: $0 for estates under $50,000; $100 for $50,000-$99,999; $200 for $100,000-$499,999 (shown for a $150,000 estate); $1,000 for $500,000-$999,999; tiered up to $10,000 plus 0.02% above $10,000,000. Same in every Maryland Register of Wills.$50,000$3,500-$9,000 (est.)Data only
Massachusetts$375Statewide uniform fee of $375 for informal or formal probate of will and/or appointment of personal representative (MGL c. 262 §40). Same in every Massachusetts Probate and Family Court.$25,000$3,250-$8,500 (est.)Data only
Michigan$150Statewide uniform fee of $150 to commence a decedent estate (MCL 600.880). A mandatory value-based inventory fee also applies under MCL 600.871.$53,000$3,000-$7,500 (est.)Cost calculator
Minnesota$310-$325$310 base civil filing fee (Minn. Stat. § 357.021, subd. 2) plus county law library fee ($0 to $15); $320 is the most common total. Varies by county.$75,000$3,250-$8,250 (est.)Cost calculator
Mississippi$135-$184Statutory base: $85 clerk fee (Miss. Code § 25-7-9(2)) plus $40 Judicial System Operation Fund plus $10 Comprehensive Electronic Court Systems Fund = $135 statewide base; county add-ons bring observed totals to about $148 to $184. Varies by county.$75,000$2,500-$6,250 (est.)Cost calculator
Missouri$75-$365Statewide value-based scale under RSMo 488.012: $75 (estate under $10,000); $115 ($10,000-$25,000); $155 ($25,000-$50,000); $245 ($50,000-$100,000); $305 ($100,000-$500,000, shown for a $150,000 estate); $365 (over $500,000). Same in every Missouri circuit court probate division.$40,000Statutory %Data only
Montana$70Statewide uniform flat fee of $70 for informal, formal, or supervised probate application and/or appointment of personal representative (MCA §25-1-201). Same in every Montana district court.$100,000$2,500-$6,500 (est.)Data only
Nebraska$44-$1,670Value-based county court fee schedule (Nebraska Judicial Branch, effective July 1, 2025). Informal probate: $44 flat. Formal probate tiered by estate value: $44 (under $1,000) up to $295 for the $125,000-$150,000 tier (shown for a typical $150,000 estate); highest published tier $1,670 for $5,000,001+. Statewide administrative schedule; same in all Nebraska county courts.$100,000$2,500-$6,500 (est.)Data only
Nevada$186-$538Value-based District Court filing fee (NRS 19.013 base plus NRS 19.0302 supplement plus county add-ons); Clark County published totals: $185.50 (under $20,000), $284.50 ($20,000 to $300,000), $537.50 ($300,000+). Varies by county.$25,000Statutory %Cost calculator
New Hampshire$150-$305Tiered by estate value under NH Circuit Court Rule 169 (updated July 1, 2025): $150 (estate $10,000 or less), $205 ($10,001 to $25,000), $305 (over $25,000). Statewide.None$3,000-$7,500 (est.)Data only
New Jersey$100-$125Statutory uniform fee per N.J.S.A. 22A:2-30: $100 to probate a will of up to 2 pages (plus $5 per additional page); $125 for letters of administration when there is no will. Statewide.$50,000$3,750-$9,000 (est.)Data only
New Mexico$30-$132Informal county Probate Court flat docket fee $30 (NMSA 1978, § 34-7-14); formal or contested District Court civil docket fee $132 (NMSA 1978, § 34-6-40). New Mexico imposes no probate tax.$50,000$2,750-$7,000 (est.)Cost calculator
New York$1-$1,250Statewide value-based scale under SCPA § 2402(7): $1 for voluntary administration (small estate); $45 for estates under $10,000 up to $1,250 for $500,000+. $420 shown for the $100,000-$250,000 bracket. No county variation.$50,000$4,250-$10,750 (est.)Cost calculator
North Carolina$120-$6,120$120 base fee for applying for letters (N.C. Judicial Branch); additional value-based General Court of Justice cost under G.S. 7A-307 also applies (40 cents per $100 of personal-property value, capped at $6,000). Total varies by estate value.$20,000$3,250-$8,000 (est.)Cost calculator
North Dakota$160Statewide uniform fee of $160 for all probate, guardianship, and testamentary cases (Title 30.1), effective July 1, 2025.$100,000$3,250-$8,000 (est.)Data only
Ohio$200-$300Ohio probate filing fees vary by county. Typical $200-$300 for full administration; Release from Administration approximately $100-$200. Varies by county.$35,000$2,750-$7,000 (est.)Cost calculator
Oklahoma$135Statewide uniform flat fee for probate and guardianship cases per 28 O.S. § 152(A)(3).$50,000$2,750-$7,000 (est.)Data only
Oregon$278-$1,176Statewide value-based scale (ORS 21.170): $278 for estates under $50,000; $591 for $50,000 to under $1,000,000; $882 for $1,000,000 to under $10,000,000; $1,176 for $10,000,000 or more. $591 shown for a typical mid-sized estate. Same in every county.$75,000$3,250-$8,250 (est.)Data only
Pennsylvania$200-$450Pennsylvania Register of Wills and Orphans' Court fees are county-specific. Planning range $200-$450 for formal administration; $125-$275 for small-estate petition. Varies by county.$50,000$3,000-$7,750 (est.)Cost calculator
Rhode Island$30-$1,5001% of the decedent's personal property subject to court jurisdiction, minimum $30, maximum $1,500 per R.I. Gen. Laws § 33-22-21(a); typical based on approximately $75,000 in personal property for a $150,000 estate.$15,000$3,750-$9,250 (est.)Data only
South Carolina$25-$1,845Statewide value-based scale under S.C. Code § 8-21-770(B): $25 for estates under $5,000; tiers to $95 for $60,000-$100,000; then $95 plus 0.15% of value above $100,000; $845 plus 0.25% above $600,000. $95 shown for the $60,000-$100,000 tier.$45,000$3,000-$7,500 (est.)Cost calculator
South Dakota$115$75 base fee for probate of an estate (SDCL 16-2-29) plus $40 statewide UJS court automation surcharge collected in each probate proceeding. Statewide uniform across all 66 circuit court counties.$100,000$2,500-$6,250 (est.)Data only
Tennessee$230-$345Flat $230 statutory clerk fee to open and close a full estate (T.C.A. § 8-21-401); counties add local litigation taxes and administrative fees (commonly $300-$345 all-in). Certain charter-government counties (e.g., Davidson/Knox) use the itemized § 8-21-409 schedule instead. Varies by county.$50,000$3,000-$7,500 (est.)Cost calculator
Texas$75-$400County-set fees under Texas Local Government Code Chapter 118. Typical $200-$350 for medium to large counties; $75-$150 for rural counties. Varies by county.$75,000$3,750-$9,250 (est.)Cost calculator
Utah$375Statewide uniform civil filing fee of $375 for any civil complaint or petition invoking court jurisdiction (Utah Code 78A-2-301(1)(a)), including probate and estate matters; raised from $360 effective May 7, 2025. Same in every Utah district court.$100,000$3,250-$8,500 (est.)Data only
Vermont$50-$3,250Statewide value-based scale under 32 V.S.A. § 1434(a): $50 for estate up to $10,000; $110 for $10,001-$50,000; $265 for $50,001-$150,000; $500 for $150,001-$500,000; $1,000 for $500,001-$1,000,000; $1,750 for $1,000,001-$5,000,000; $2,500 for $5,000,001-$10,000,000; $3,250 for over $10,000,000. $265 shown for a $150,000 estate. Same in every Vermont Probate Division.$45,000$2,750-$7,000 (est.)Data only
Virginia$70-$1,030A state probate tax of 10 cents per $100 of estate value (estates of $15,000 or less are exempt) plus a roughly $30 clerk qualification fee, and many localities add a local probate tax of up to one third of the state tax (Va. Code 58.1-1718). Shown at a representative $150,000 estate: about $150 state tax plus the qualification fee. This is a probate tax, not a flat court filing fee.$75,000$3,750-$9,500 (est.)Cost calculator
Washington$250Statewide uniform fee: $200 base to commence probate (RCW 36.18.020(2)(f)) plus $50 surcharge on probate filings (RCW 36.18.020(6)). Same in every county.$100,000$3,500-$8,750 (est.)Data only
West Virginia$44-$175County-set probate qualification fees based on WV Code Chapter 44 and Chapter 59 framework; no statewide uniform fee. Typical county clerk charges: approximately $44 (intestate) or $56 (testate, will of 5 pages or less), comprising application fee, bond fee, and $20 publication notice fee (WV Code § 44-1-14A). Counties with fiduciary supervisors add up to $25 (estate under $10,000), $100 ($10,000-$50,000), or $175 (over $50,000). $75 shown as a representative mid-range figure for a $150,000 estate without a fiduciary supervisor. Varies by county.$50,000$2,000-$5,000 (est.)Data only
Wisconsin$300Statewide formula under Wis. Stat. § 814.66(1)(a): $20 if net value of property subject to administration is $10,000 or less, otherwise 0.2% of net value (no cap). $300 shown for a $150,000 net estate. Same rate in every county.$50,000$2,750-$7,000 (est.)Cost calculator
Wyoming$235About $235 all-in for a $150,000 estate: a $160 base filing fee (Wyo. Stat. § 2-2-401) plus a value-based inventory fee ($5 for an estate of $5,000-$10,000, then $5 per additional $10,000 or fraction above $10,000, about $75 at a $150,000 estate). Same statewide in every Wyoming district court; the base alone is $160.$400,000Statutory %Data only

Filing fees and small-estate limits are official figures from state statutes and court fee schedules. Attorney fees marked "(est.)" are Settled Estate estimates. See the methodology section below for sources.

What actually drives the cost of probate

Put the pieces together and a realistic cost picture looks like this. The court filing fee is rarely the problem. The big variables are whether the estate can use a small-estate shortcut at all, what the executor and the attorney are paid, and how long the estate must stay open while costs accrue. Layer on real property, a bond, publication, and appraisals, or any dispute, and the gap between a clean small estate and a contested formal administration is enormous, even within one state.

As a rough order of magnitude, settling a straightforward, uncontested estate usually runs from a few thousand dollars to the low five figures: a filing fee in the low hundreds, an attorney fee our estimates put around $2,000 to $12,000 depending on the state, and, where it applies, executor compensation. A percentage-schedule state, a large estate, real property, or any dispute can push the total well above that.

Three practical takeaways:

  • Check the small-estate threshold first. For estates that qualify, the simplified path is often the single biggest cost lever, though eligibility depends on the estate's assets and state law, and most thresholds exclude real estate. See the small estate affidavit page for your state's rule.
  • In a percentage-schedule state, you can estimate fees up front. In a "reasonable compensation" state, the fee is typically set by agreement or court approval, and courts generally expect documentation of the work performed.
  • Budget for time, not just fees. A longer creditor period means a longer administration and more carrying costs.

One more creditor can outweigh all the others. If the person who died received certain Medicaid benefits (generally long-term care, or benefits received at age 55 or older), the state can file an estate-recovery claim against the estate, often against the home, during the same creditor window, and the rules and exemptions vary widely by state. If that might apply, see our Medicaid estate recovery guide for your state.

What an executor can be paid

Executor compensation (called personal representative or administrator compensation in many states) is one of the largest costs in a formal probate, and states take two very different approaches. Among the 22 states Settled Estate covers in full, 14 set the pay by a statutory percentage schedule or a hard cap. The other 8 leave it to a "reasonable compensation" standard, where a written agreement or the court decides.

States with a statutory percentage or cap

StateHow executor pay is setStatute
Arkansas10% of the first $1,000, 5% of the next $4,000, and 3% of the balance (personal property)Ark. Code 28-48-108
California4% of the first $100,000, 3% of the next $100,000, 2% of the next $800,000, 1% of the next $9 million, 0.5% of the next $15 millionCal. Prob. Code 10800
FloridaPresumed reasonable: 3% up to $1 million, 2.5% to $5 million, 2% to $10 million, 1.5% aboveFla. Stat. 733.617
Nevada4% of the first $15,000, 3% of the next $85,000, 2% above $100,000NRS 150.020
New York5% of the first $100,000, 4% of the next $200,000, 3% of the next $700,000, 2.5% of the next $4 million, 2% above $5 millionSCPA 2307
Ohio4% of the first $100,000, 3% of the next $300,000, 2% above $400,000 (personal property and sale proceeds), plus 1% of unsold real propertyORC 2113.35
Texas5% of cash actually received plus 5% of cash actually paid outTex. Est. Code 352.002
AlabamaUp to 2.5% of receipts plus 2.5% of disbursementsAla. Code 43-2-848
Georgia2.5% of money received plus 2.5% of money paid outO.C.G.A. 53-6-60
North CarolinaClerk-set, up to a 5% commission ceilingN.C. Gen. Stat. 28A-23-3
South CarolinaUp to 5% of personal property plus real-property sale proceedsS.C. Code 62-3-719
Wisconsin2% of the inventory value (default)Wis. Stat. 857.05(2)
Louisiana2.5% of the inventory (default succession-representative commission)La. C.C.P. art. 3351
VirginiaCommissioners of Accounts guideline (a declining percentage), approved by the CommissionerVa. Code 64.2-1208

Two of these schedules need a footnote. In New York, SCPA 2307 commissions are calculated on the sums the executor receives and pays out, not as a flat percentage of one estate value, so the rate tiers apply to those amounts. In Arkansas, the executor commission shown above and the attorney fee are set by different subsections of the same statute (Ark. Code 28-48-108), so they are two separate figures, not one.

States that use a "reasonable compensation" standard

StateHow executor pay is setStatute
ArizonaReasonable compensation, no fixed scheduleA.R.S. 14-3719
ColoradoReasonable compensation, no fixed scheduleC.R.S. 15-10-602, 15-10-603
MichiganReasonable compensation, no fixed scheduleMCL 700.3719
MinnesotaReasonable compensation, no fixed scheduleMinn. Stat. 524.3-719
MississippiCourt-set by the value and difficulty of the work, no scheduleMiss. Code 91-7-299
New MexicoReasonable compensation, no fixed scheduleNMSA 45-3-719
PennsylvaniaReasonable and just, no single statewide formula20 Pa.C.S. 3537
TennesseeCourt-set reasonable compensation, no scheduleT.C.A. 30-2-606

The split is the headline. In a percentage-schedule state, a family can estimate the executor's fee up front: a $600,000 California estate carries an ordinary statutory commission of $15,000 to the executor under Probate Code 10800, and the estate's attorney is entitled to a matching $15,000 under the parallel schedule in Probate Code 10810, so the ordinary statutory fees come to about $30,000 before any extraordinary services (applied here to the full value for illustration; the actual base follows California's inventory rules). In a "reasonable compensation" state, the same estate has no published number, which can be a feature (a family member often waives the fee) or a friction point (the amount has to be justified to a court). The gap also widens with size: on a $1 million California estate the ordinary schedule produces about $23,000 for the executor and another $23,000 for the attorney, and on a $3 million estate it is roughly $43,000 each, which is why the statutory-schedule states matter most for larger estates. To see the figure for a value you enter, use the executor compensation tool for your state.

How long probate takes, and why it cannot finish sooner

Cost and time are linked: the longer an estate stays open, the more it carries in fees and administration. Even a simple, uncontested estate usually cannot close right away, because most states require it to stay open for a creditor claim period. During that window creditors can present claims, and an executor who distributes too early can be personally exposed. This is the clearest reason probate takes months even when nothing is in dispute.

StateCreditor claim periodStatute
Florida3 monthsFla. Stat. 733.702
Georgia3 monthsO.C.G.A. 53-7-41
Mississippi3 monthsMiss. Code 91-7-145
Nevada3 monthsNRS 147.040
North Carolina3 monthsN.C. Gen. Stat. 28A-14-1, 28A-19-3
Wisconsin3 monthsWis. Stat. 859.01
California4 monthsCal. Prob. Code 9100
Colorado4 monthsC.R.S. 15-12-801
Michigan4 monthsMCL 700.3801
Minnesota4 monthsMinn. Stat. 524.3-801
New Mexico4 monthsNMSA 45-3-801
Tennessee4 monthsT.C.A. 30-2-306
Texas4 monthsTex. Est. Code 308.054
Alabama6 monthsAla. Code 43-2-350
Arkansas6 monthsArk. Code 28-50-101
Ohio6 monthsORC Chapter 2117
New York7 monthsSCPA 1802
South Carolina8 monthsS.C. Code 62-3-803
Pennsylvania12 months20 Pa.C.S. 3532

Most states cluster at 3 to 4 months, but the tail is long: Alabama, Arkansas, and Ohio run 6 months, New York 7, South Carolina 8, and Pennsylvania a full year before claims are generally barred. The start date varies too. Many states run the clock from the first published notice to creditors, and known creditors usually get separate direct notice with their own deadline. Arizona, Louisiana, and Virginia structure this differently and are not shown above.

The creditor period is only a floor. Outside estimates of total probate duration vary widely, commonly cited anywhere from around nine months to several years, because there is no central probate database and every estate differs. Contested wills, real property, tax filings, and missing heirs all add time. For the full sequence in one place, see the probate timeline for your state.

See your state's numbers

The figures above are the statewide picture and the governing rules. For the current filing fees and statutory figures in your state, including county-level detail, start here:

How we compiled this

Coverage. This study reports court filing fees, small-estate thresholds, and estimated attorney fees for all 50 states. Executor compensation and creditor claim periods are shown for the 22 states where Settled Estate maintains a full verified dataset, the same data that powers our state fee calculators and guides.

Filing fees are taken from the fee schedules published by each state's court system or its highest-volume probate court. Where fees vary by county or estate size, we show a representative figure for a mid-size estate and note the range in each state's row. We do not show the lowest possible fee as the "typical" fee. About a third of states scale the filing fee to estate value; for those the figure is the fee at a representative estate of roughly $150,000, each such row says so, and direct comparisons of those particular fees are approximate. A few states (Virginia, for example) levy a probate tax rather than a flat court filing fee; we show that charge in the same column and label it in the row note. Several states set a base fee statewide but let counties add to it (Arizona, for instance, has a $149 statutory base but Maricopa County runs over $300), so where that happens we show the base and note the county range.

Small-estate thresholds come from the statutes that authorize a simplified affidavit or summary procedure. Where a state has more than one threshold (for example, separate rules for personal property versus real property), we show the primary threshold a family would encounter. Most cover personal property only and exclude real estate, and a surviving spouse often gets a higher limit.

Attorney fees are Settled Estate estimates, not quotes for any specific estate. For the 43 states without a statutory attorney-fee schedule, we estimate the ordinary fee for a straightforward, uncontested estate as 10 to 25 hours of attorney time multiplied by that state's average attorney hourly rate from the Clio Legal Trends Report (2025 data), rounded to the nearest $250. The hours band is our stated assumption; the hourly rate is an external benchmark, so the same method applies to every state and any figure can be reproduced. This is an estimate for comparison, not a measured survey and not a quote: a simple estate needs fewer hours and a complex or contested one far more, the rate we use is the general all-practice average rather than a probate-specific rate, and many probate attorneys bill a flat fee or a percentage instead of by the hour. For the seven states that set ordinary fees by a statutory or presumed schedule (California, Florida, Arkansas, Nevada, Iowa, Missouri, Wyoming), we instead apply that schedule to a $400,000 estate (the resulting figure is in the downloadable dataset). The mechanics vary: California's is a fixed fee, Iowa's a cap, Missouri's a floor a court can exceed, Florida's is a presumed-reasonable schedule, and Nevada's, Arkansas's, and Wyoming's are schedules a court approves or adjusts.

Executor compensation and creditor periods are tied to the governing statute in the tables above and maintained against primary sources. Several figures adjust on a schedule: California's small-estate threshold adjusts every three years (next on April 1, 2028), and Michigan's adjusts annually, among others. Filing fees and statutes can change at any time. Treat this as a current snapshot for 2026, not a permanent reference.

Last verified: June 30, 2026.

Cite or republish this study

Settled Estate, How Much Does Probate Cost by State (2026).

This data and the chart above are free to republish with attribution and a link back to this page. To embed the chart, copy this code:

<a href="https://settledestate.com/blog/cost-of-probate-by-state/">
  <img src="https://settledestate.com/images/blog/probate-filing-fees-by-state-2026.webp"
       alt="Court filing fee to open probate by state, 2026 (Settled Estate)" width="540">
</a>
<p>Source: <a href="https://settledestate.com/blog/cost-of-probate-by-state/">How Much Does Probate Cost by State (2026), Settled Estate</a></p>

The full dataset is also available as a downloadable CSV, with the governing source URL for every filing fee and threshold.

If you reference the figures, please note that filing fees are drawn from official sources (value-based fees are shown at a representative estate size) and attorney-fee ranges are Settled Estate estimates.

About the author

By Evan Reid, founder of Settled Estate. Evan built and maintains Settled's 50-state probate cost database, drawing on state statutes, county court fee schedules, and published attorney-rate benchmarks, to make the cost of settling an estate clearer for families. Read more on the Evan Reid author page or about Settled Estate. Settled Estate is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice, and it offers paid probate-guidance plans; the figures here are general information, free to use, not a quote for any specific estate.

Frequently asked questions

How much does probate cost on average?

Court filing fees in most states fall in the low hundreds of dollars, and the median across all 50 states is about $233. The larger cost is usually attorney and executor fees, which range widely by state and estate size. Seven states set ordinary attorney fees by a statutory or presumed schedule.

Which states are the most and least expensive for probate?

Among the 50 states in this study, New Mexico has the lowest typical court filing fee at $30 and Rhode Island the highest at $750 (Rhode Island scales its fee to estate value). The median is about $233. Seven states set ordinary attorney fees by a statutory or presumed schedule: California, Florida, Arkansas, Nevada, Iowa, Missouri, and Wyoming, where a large estate can trigger a fee far above what hourly counsel would charge elsewhere.

How long does probate take?

Even a simple, uncontested estate usually cannot close right away, because most states keep it open for a creditor claim period. That window runs 3 to 4 months in many states but runs longer in several states: 6 months in Alabama, Arkansas, and Ohio, 7 in New York, 8 in South Carolina, and a full year in Pennsylvania. Outside estimates of total duration vary widely, commonly from around nine months to several years, depending on the estate and the state.

How much can an executor be paid?

It depends on the state. Among the 22 states Settled covers in full, 14 set executor or personal representative pay by a statutory percentage schedule or cap (for example California's tiered schedule under Probate Code 10800, or Texas at 5% of cash received and 5% paid out). The others use a "reasonable compensation" standard, where a court or written agreement sets the amount.

Is the court filing fee the main cost of probate?

No. The filing fee is usually the smallest line item, often a flat few hundred dollars. The bigger costs are attorney fees and executor compensation, plus publication, certified copies, appraisals, and bond when required, and the carrying costs of keeping an estate open through the creditor period.

Information current as of June 30, 2026

This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Probate laws and procedures in your state can change. Consult with a qualified attorney for advice specific to your situation. Full disclaimer.