Do I Need a
Probate Attorney?
Not always — but sometimes absolutely yes. This guide explains exactly when an attorney is necessary, when professional help is strongly recommended even if not required, and when executors can handle probate on their own.
Do I Need a Probate Attorney?
The question most executors are actually asking is not "am I legally required to hire an attorney" — it's "will I make expensive mistakes if I don't?" Those are different questions with different answers. This guide answers both.
The honest answer: a probate attorney is not always necessary, but the consequences of executor errors are serious. Distributing assets before paying creditors, missing notice deadlines, failing to file required tax returns, or handling a contested will without counsel can result in personal liability — meaning creditors can come after the executor's personal assets, not just estate assets. See our full breakdown in the Executor Duties guide.
When You Absolutely Need a Probate Attorney
The following situations make professional legal counsel practically necessary — not merely advisable. Attempting to handle these without an attorney creates significant risk of personal liability, procedural errors that delay the estate, or outcomes that harm beneficiaries.
The Will Is Being Contested
A will contest is litigation — someone is challenging the will's validity in court. This requires an attorney. The grounds for contesting a will (lack of capacity, undue influence, fraud, improper execution) are legal claims with specific evidentiary standards. Representing an estate in litigation without legal counsel is not realistic. See our guide on Contesting a Will.
The Estate May Owe Estate Tax
Federal estate tax applies to estates over $13.61 million (2024). Some states have lower thresholds — Massachusetts and Oregon have estate tax starting at $1 million; Washington state at $2.193 million. If the estate may be taxable at the federal or state level, an attorney working with a CPA is essential to minimize tax liability and ensure proper filings.
Real Property in Multiple States
Each state where real property is held at death requires its own probate proceeding — called ancillary probate. Managing two or more probate proceedings simultaneously, under different states' laws, is extremely difficult without legal help. See our Ancillary Probate guide for details.
Disputes Among Heirs or Beneficiaries
When heirs disagree about the distribution, challenge the executor's decisions, or object to the accounting, the estate is at serious risk of litigation. An attorney can often resolve disputes before they become lawsuits — but if a lawsuit is filed, representation is not optional.
The Estate Is Insolvent
When debts exceed estate assets, the order in which creditors are paid becomes legally critical. Paying the wrong creditors first — or distributing any assets to beneficiaries before all creditors are resolved — creates personal liability for the executor. State statutory priority orders govern this, and getting them wrong is costly.
Significant Business Interests
Closely held businesses, partnerships, LLCs, and professional practices require proper valuation, proper transfer procedures, and often involve buy-sell agreements with specific legal requirements. Mishandling a business interest transfer can create liability and destroy value.
When an Attorney Is Strongly Recommended
These situations don't automatically require an attorney — but the risk of costly mistakes is high enough that professional guidance is strongly recommended for most executors.
Real Property in a Single State
Transferring real estate through probate requires specific court orders, deed preparation, and title company coordination. Errors in the deed or transfer process can cloud title and make the property difficult to sell later. Most executors handling real property benefit from attorney guidance even when it's technically possible to proceed without one.
Estate Value Above $200,000
Larger estates have more moving parts — more assets to inventory and value, more creditor claims to resolve, more complex accountings to prepare. The cost of executor errors scales with estate size. For most estates above $200,000, attorney fees are a small percentage of the protection they provide.
The Executor Is Unfamiliar With the Process
Most people are executors once in their life, without prior experience. Missing a creditor notice deadline, distributing assets before paying creditors, or failing to file required tax returns are common executor mistakes — and each creates personal liability. If you're not confident in the procedural requirements, legal guidance pays for itself.
The Deceased Had Significant Debts or Creditor Claims
Properly reviewing, accepting, and rejecting creditor claims requires understanding the statutory priority order and deadlines. Accepting a claim that should have been rejected — or missing the deadline to reject one — can affect the distribution to beneficiaries and create liability for the executor.
When You Can Handle Probate Without an Attorney
The most straightforward scenario for self-represented probate is a small estate that qualifies for a simplified affidavit procedure. In 42 states, estates below a dollar threshold — ranging from $10,000 in Georgia to $184,500 in California — can bypass formal probate entirely using a small estate affidavit. No court appearance, no attorney required in most cases. Use our Small Estate Checker to see if your estate qualifies.
- The estate qualifies for a small estate affidavit in your state
- There is no real property — only bank accounts, personal property, and vehicles
- All heirs agree on the distribution and are cooperative
- No will is being contested and there are no creditor disputes
- The estate clearly owes no estate tax
- Your state allows independent administration with minimal court oversight
- You are comfortable reading and following statutory requirements
- The will is being challenged by any heir or interested party
- Any heir or beneficiary is threatening legal action
- Real property is involved in more than one state
- The estate may owe federal or state estate tax
- The estate has business interests or complex investments
- The estate is insolvent or has significant creditor claims
- You are personally worried about liability as executor
You don't have to choose between full representation and no help at all. Many probate attorneys offer unbundled legal services — a flat-fee consultation to review the situation and advise on the process, document preparation only, or review of forms you've prepared. For simple estates, a one-time consultation ($300–$600) often provides enough guidance to proceed independently.
What Does a Probate Attorney Actually Do?
Understanding what an attorney actually handles helps you evaluate whether you need one — and helps you use their time efficiently if you hire one.
How to Find and Hire a Probate Attorney
Once you've decided professional help is warranted, here's how to find qualified counsel efficiently.
Look for attorneys who specialize in probate or estate administration
Not every family lawyer handles probate regularly. Look specifically for attorneys whose practice includes probate administration — not just estate planning. Many attorneys who draft wills and trusts also handle probate, but confirm their experience with estate administration specifically.
Confirm they are licensed in the state where probate is filed
Probate is filed in the state where the deceased resided — and the attorney must be licensed in that state. If you live in a different state than where probate is being filed, you will need an attorney in the decedent's state, not your own.
Understand the fee structure before signing anything
Ask upfront whether fees are hourly, a percentage of estate value, or a flat fee. In states with statutory fee schedules, the fees are set by law — in others, they're negotiable. Get the fee structure in writing before signing any engagement agreement. See our guide on How Much Does Probate Cost for state-by-state fee norms.
Ask about their communication practices
Probate can take 9–18 months. How often will they update you? Will you receive copies of all filings? Who handles questions when the lead attorney is unavailable? Probate delays are often caused by poor communication — between the attorney and executor, or between the attorney and the court.
Use our referral network if you need help finding one
Our attorney referral service connects you with estate attorneys across all 50 states at no cost to you. Use the form in the next section or visit probatelawcenter.org/find-an-attorney.
How Much Does a Probate Attorney Cost?
These costs are paid from estate assets — reducing what beneficiaries receive. In states with statutory fee schedules, the fee is determined by a formula in state law and is not negotiable for "ordinary" services. Complex matters — contested wills, tax issues, business interests — allow for additional fees above the statutory amount for "extraordinary" services.
For a complete breakdown of all probate costs — attorney fees, court fees, executor compensation, and appraiser costs — by state, see our guide: How Much Does Probate Cost?
If the estate qualifies for a small estate affidavit procedure — available in 42 states for estates below a dollar threshold — formal probate and most attorney fees can be avoided entirely. Use our Small Estate Checker to see if your estate qualifies before engaging an attorney for full probate.
Find a Probate Attorney in Your State
If you've determined that professional legal help is right for your situation, our referral network can connect you with a licensed estate attorney in your state at no cost to you.
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