Why We Built This.
Who We Built It For.
Probate is one of the most consequential legal processes most families will ever navigate — usually while grieving, often without adequate guidance. We exist to change that.
"To give every family navigating probate access to the same quality of guidance that has traditionally been available only to those who could afford the best estate attorneys — delivered clearly, accurately, and completely free."
The Information Gap in Probate Is a Real Problem
When someone dies, the people left behind are asked to become legal administrators overnight. They must file with courts they've never entered, meet deadlines they didn't know existed, notify creditors according to procedures they've never encountered, and make financial decisions with permanent consequences — all while grieving.
The people who navigate this well have something most families don't: access to experienced estate attorneys who can explain every step. An executor with good legal counsel doesn't miss creditor deadlines. They don't distribute assets before debts are settled. They don't unknowingly expose themselves to personal liability.
Everyone else is left to search the internet and hope what they find is accurate, current, and specific to their state. Most of the time, it isn't.
ProbateLawCenter exists to close that gap. We provide the same depth of guidance — state-specific, process-specific, accurate, and actionable — that an experienced estate attorney would give a client on day one.
We don't provide legal advice, and we are not a substitute for an attorney in complex situations. But for the millions of families who need to understand what they're facing before they can even ask the right questions, we are built to be the most reliable starting point available.
What Happens Without Reliable Guidance
The consequences of bad or missing information in probate are not abstract. They cost families money, time, and relationships. These are the three patterns we see most.
Executors Miss Deadlines They Didn't Know Existed
Every state has mandatory creditor notification windows, court filing deadlines, and tax obligations tied to the probate calendar. Executors who don't know these deadlines miss them — and expose themselves to personal liability for claims that come in after early distributions.
Families Don't Know Which Assets Even Go Through Probate
Life insurance, retirement accounts, joint tenancy property, and assets held in trust pass entirely outside the probate estate. Executors who don't understand this misclassify assets, create beneficiary conflicts, and delay closing the estate by months or years.
People Accept Slow, Expensive Probate as Inevitable
42 states have simplified procedures for small estates. Millions of families go through full probate every year because no one told them they qualified for a faster process. The information was available — it just wasn't accessible.
"Most probate mistakes are not the result of bad intentions. They are the result of missing information arriving too late."
What It Takes to Get Probate Information Right
Probate law is state-specific, procedurally complex, and changes frequently. Providing reliable guidance requires a disciplined process at every step — from research through publication through ongoing maintenance.
Primary Source Research
Every guide begins with primary sources: state statutes, court rules, probate court websites, and official government publications. We do not rely on secondary summaries or aggregated legal databases as the basis for state-specific claims.
Licensed Attorney Review
Every page covering state law, procedural requirements, executor duties, or legal thresholds is reviewed by a licensed estate attorney before publication. Reviewers are identified by name and bar number on each reviewed page.
Plain-Language Editing
Legal accuracy means nothing if the content cannot be understood by a non-attorney managing an estate for the first time. Every guide is written and edited to be clear, specific, and actionable — without sacrificing precision.
Source Citation Throughout
Every statute reference, threshold figure, deadline, and statistic is cited to its original source. We do not state facts without attribution. Readers should always be able to verify what we've written independently.
Annual Accuracy Audits
State probate thresholds, filing fees, and procedural rules change. We conduct systematic annual audits of all state-specific content and update pages immediately when laws change — not on a publishing cycle, but as changes occur.
Date and Review Transparency
Every page displays its last-reviewed date, the name of the reviewing attorney, and links to the primary sources used. We do not hide the age of our content or obscure who reviewed it.
The Commitments We Make to Every Reader
These are not aspirations. They are operating requirements — the specific standards our content must meet before it is published and after it is live.
State-Specific Accuracy
Probate law varies dramatically by state. We never publish generic national guidance when state-specific information is required. Every state guide reflects the actual statutes and procedures for that jurisdiction.
Current at All Times
Outdated probate information is worse than no information — it creates false confidence. We maintain continuous monitoring of state law changes and update content within 30 days of any substantive change.
Named Expert Review
Anonymous review is not review. Every attorney who reviews content for ProbateLawCenter is identified by full name, bar number, and state of licensure on the pages they've reviewed.
Full Source Transparency
We cite every statute, threshold, deadline, and data point to its original source. Readers are never asked to simply trust what we've written — they are always given the means to verify it.
Permanently Free Access
Every guide, tool, checklist, and downloadable resource on ProbateLawCenter is and will remain free of charge. We do not gate content behind paywalls, require account creation, or charge for access to any resource.
Honest About Limitations
We clearly distinguish between general education and legal advice. We tell readers when their situation is complex enough to require an attorney. We do not overstate what general information can accomplish.
Built for Everyone Probate Touches
Probate involves multiple parties with different roles, different questions, and different needs at different stages of the process. We build content specifically for each of them.
Executors & Administrators
Newly appointed · No prior probate experience
Most executors have never held the role before and are managing an estate at the same time they are grieving. We provide sequential, task-based guidance covering every executor duty — from filing the will through closing the estate — with state-specific requirements, deadline calendars, and document checklists at every step.
Heirs & Beneficiaries
Waiting on an estate · Unsure of their rights
Heirs and beneficiaries often don't know what they're entitled to, what the executor is required to do, or how long the process should take. We provide clear explanations of heir rights, beneficiary timelines, what to do when an executor isn't communicating, and when contesting a will may be appropriate.
Estate Planners & Families
Planning ahead · Trying to avoid probate
Many families come to ProbateLawCenter not because they're in probate, but because they want to avoid it. We provide comprehensive guidance on the tools available to keep assets out of probate — living trusts, beneficiary designations, joint tenancy, and small estate planning — with state-specific thresholds and implications.
What ProbateLawCenter Is — and Is Not
Being honest about what we provide is as important as the guidance itself. The line between legal education and legal advice matters, and we take it seriously.
A law firm or attorney referral service. We do not provide legal advice, and no attorney-client relationship is created by using this site.
An educational resource that explains how probate law works — with the accuracy and depth of guidance an attorney would provide to an informed client.
A substitute for legal counsel in contested estates, complex tax situations, multi-state asset cases, or any situation with significant legal risk.
The most comprehensive free resource available for understanding what you're facing — and for knowing when and how to engage an attorney.
Funded by advertisers, product companies, or legal service referral programs. We do not accept payment to recommend attorneys, products, or services.
An independent educational resource with no financial interest in the legal decisions our readers make. Our only goal is accuracy.
A source of generic, nationally-averaged probate guidance that ignores the significant variation in state law. One-size-fits-all probate information is often wrong.
State-specific by design. Every guide is written for the actual statutes, thresholds, and procedures of the jurisdiction it covers — and reviewed by an attorney licensed in that state.
How Every Page Earns Its Place on This Site
Attorney review is not a badge we apply to content after the fact. It is embedded in our production process at every stage — from initial research through final publication.
Primary Source Research
Writers source every legal claim directly from state statutes, court rules, and official government publications. No secondary aggregation is used as the basis for legal statements.
Draft Submission for Legal Review
Completed drafts are submitted to a licensed estate attorney in the relevant jurisdiction. Reviewers check for legal accuracy, procedural correctness, and misleading omissions.
Editorial Plain-Language Pass
Following legal review, editors revise for clarity, readability, and accessibility — ensuring the content serves a non-attorney audience without losing legal precision.
Publication with Full Attribution
Pages are published with the reviewing attorney's name, bar number, review date, and links to primary sources. Nothing is published anonymously.
Ongoing Monitoring & Updates
Published pages are monitored for law changes. When state law changes affecting probate thresholds, procedures, or requirements, affected pages are updated and re-reviewed within 30 days.
What Our Reviewing Attorneys Check
Review criteria for every published pageAll statutory references are accurate and current for the jurisdiction
Dollar thresholds, deadlines, and filing fees reflect current law
Procedural steps are in the correct sequence with no misleading omissions
Content does not cross the line from legal education to legal advice
Situations requiring professional legal counsel are clearly flagged
All citations link to original statutes or official government sources
Content would not mislead a non-attorney managing a real estate
Everything We Do Is Documented and Verifiable
Trust cannot be claimed — it has to be demonstrated. Every standard we hold ourselves to is published, every process is documented, and every reader has the tools to verify what we've written.
The Guidance You Need Is
Already Here.
Whether you're an executor who just inherited a role you didn't ask for, an heir trying to understand your rights, or a family planning ahead — we have the resources you need, and they're entirely free.