Cameron County Register of Wills and Orphans' Court Guide
Cameron County Court of Common Pleas · Register of Wills and Orphans' Court information · Updated May 2026
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Feeling overwhelmed?
Free help is available in Cameron County.
Not sure if you need probate?
Many estates can avoid probate entirely. Assets with beneficiary designations, joint accounts, and trust assets may pass automatically without court involvement.
First: Get Death Certificates
Required for everythingPennsylvania Division of Vital Records
Secure the Property
- Lock the residence and secure valuable items
- Forward mail to a responsible family member
- Make a list of what you find (don't throw anything away yet)
Locate Important Documents
County filing checklist
Cameron County probate filing checklist
Use this checklist to confirm the local Pennsylvania Register of Wills and Orphans' Court, compare common probate paths, gather starting documents, and verify county packet instructions before filing. This is an informational checklist, not legal advice, a court-approved packet, or a replacement for county filing-office instructions.
Where to verify locally
- Register of Wills and Orphans' Court
- Cameron County Court of Common Pleas - Orphans' Court Division
- Clerk
- Cameron County Recorder of Deeds, Register of Wills, and Clerk of Orphans' Court
- Address
- Cameron County Courthouse, 20 E 5th Street, Emporium, PA 15834
- Phone
- (814) 486-3349
Common filing paths
Formal administration
Cameron County's Register of Wills files probate proceedings and appoints executors and administrators for estates.
Small estate affidavit
Pennsylvania small-estate settlement is a court petition under 20 Pa.C.S. Section 3102. Verify Cameron County's current petition handling, local forms, and fee requirements before filing.
- Threshold:
- $50,000 gross personal property, subject to statutory exclusions
Payments Without Letters
20 Pa.C.S. Section 3101 allows limited payment of certain wages, deposit accounts, patient-care accounts, life-insurance amounts payable to an estate, and unclaimed property without letters when the statute's amount, relationship, and documentation requirements are met.
Starting documents to verify
Statewide starting documents
- County Register of Wills probate or administration petition packet (County ROW packet)
- Certified death certificate
- Original will and codicils if applicable
- Petition details for letters
- Renunciations, consents, or bond papers if applicable
- Short certificate or certified-copy request if applicable
Filing links
Fee signals
- Formal administration: $41.25
- Pennsylvania Register of Wills grant-of-letters fees are a per-county sliding scale on the gross probate estate value. petition_probate ($41.25) records the statewide JCS/JCP surcharge (42 Pa.C.S.; Act 45 of 2025, eff. 11/17/2025) imposed on every petition for grant of letters; this county's graduated grant-of-letters fee was not machine-readable from its published schedule at audit time and must be confirmed from the linked fee schedule before quoting an estate total. Source: county Register of Wills fee schedule.
Deadline signals
- Creditor claims period: 12 months.
Compare next-step options
If you are not sure probate is required, start with the probate assessment. If you are ready to organize a filing, use the county-aware plan handoff.
Check if probate is neededA personalized probate report for estates that likely need court administration.
Get My Plan$19 one-time · Delivered to your inbox in about 15 minutes
Checklist details combine county source links with Pennsylvania statutory and state-default source records. Confirm final packet forms, fees, and filing instructions with the county office before filing.
This informational filing guide is not legal advice or a court-approved packet. Confirm final instructions, forms, fees, and filing options with the listed official sources before filing.
Other Topics That May Apply
You've seen what probate involves. Here's how to spare your own family.
A few simple steps (naming beneficiaries, a transfer-on-death deed where your state allows it, or a living trust) can keep your estate out of court.
See how to avoid probate in PennsylvaniaVerified against Cameron County Court of Common Pleas - Orphans' Court Division on May 16, 2026
This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Probate laws and procedures in Pennsylvania can change. Consult with a qualified attorney for advice specific to your situation. Full disclaimer.