Texas County Probate Court Directory
Find the Constitutional County Court or probate filing office for Texas estate filings, county venue checks, local packet questions, and county page details.
Search for Your County
Texas probate venue depends on the county court structure. Some counties use constitutional county courts, some use county courts at law, and large metropolitan counties may have statutory probate courts with probate jurisdiction.
For broader Texas court-source navigation, use the Texas probate resource map to compare constitutional county court, filing-path, local-rule, form, and courthouse-specific source links where available.
What You'll Find
Each county page includes this information (where available).
Court Address
Physical location of the probate court
Phone Numbers
Contact the clerk's office directly
Website Links
Official court websites and e-filing
Office Hours
When the court is open for filing
Browse All Texas Counties
Click any county to see court contact information and probate details.★ indicates counties with detailed data.
B19 counties
C28 counties
G12 counties
H23 counties
I1 county
L15 counties
M20 counties
N5 counties
O3 counties
R12 counties
S18 counties
V3 counties
W15 counties
Tips for Contacting the Court
Before You Call
- •Have the decedent's full name, date of death, and last Texas address ready
- •Know whether there is an original will, codicil, trust, or no-will estate
- •List the county and, if known, the county seat or courthouse location, such as Palestine, Andrews, Lufkin
- •Write down whether you are asking about letters, a small-estate path, original-will filing, or Constitutional County Court packet requirements
What to Ask
- •Which Constitutional County Court or county office should handle this estate?
- •Does the office require an appointment, mailed packet, e-filing, or in-person filing?
- •Which Texas forms and local packet pages should I use?
- •What are the current filing fee, certified-copy fee, and payment options?
- •How should I present the original will and certified death certificate?
- •When does a County Court at Law or Statutory Probate Court handle the filing instead?
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I find the probate filing office for my county in Texas?
What should I ask the Texas probate filing office before filing?
Can county probate procedures differ within Texas?
What do I need before I call the probate filing office?
Information current as of April 4, 2026
This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Probate laws and procedures in Texas can change. Consult with a qualified attorney for advice specific to your situation. Full disclaimer.
Need Help With Your Texas Probate?
Use the Texas assessment to sort the likely probate path before choosing forms or filing steps.
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.
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