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Probate vs Trust

Probate vs Trust Administration
A Complete Comparison

Probate and trust administration are two different paths for transferring assets at death. This guide compares them side by side — costs, timelines, privacy, control, and when each makes sense — sourced from state statutes and trust codes.

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Written by
Morgan Bellaire
Reviewed for accuracy
15 min read
All 50 states
Key Takeaways
Probate is court-supervised and public — trust administration is private and requires no court involvement
Trust administration typically costs 0.5–1.5% of estate value vs probate's 3–8%
Trust administration usually takes 3–12 months vs probate's 9–18 month average
A trust only avoids probate for assets actually titled in the trust's name
You still need a will even with a trust — specifically a "pour-over will"
Trusts are more expensive to create upfront but generate long-term savings for most estates

What Are Probate and Trust Administration?

Probate Administration
The court-supervised legal process for distributing a deceased person's assets — validating the will, appointing an executor, paying creditors, and transferring property to beneficiaries under judicial oversight.
Uniform Probate Code § 3-101; applicable state probate codes
Trust Administration
The private process by which a successor trustee manages and distributes trust assets after the original trustee's death — without court involvement, following the terms of the trust document.
Uniform Trust Code § 801; applicable state trust codes

These two processes represent fundamentally different approaches to the same goal: getting assets from a deceased person to their intended recipients. Probate routes that transfer through the government — a court validates the process, supervises the executor, and signs off on the final distribution. Trust administration routes it privately — a successor trustee steps in, follows the trust's instructions, and distributes assets without ever appearing before a judge.

Neither path is universally better. The right choice depends on your estate's size, asset types, state of residence, privacy preferences, and whether the upfront cost of creating and funding a trust makes economic sense.

Side-by-Side Comparison

The table below compares probate and trust administration across the dimensions that matter most to executors, trustees, and beneficiaries.

Probate
Trust Administration
Court involvement
Required — court supervises every major step
None — successor trustee acts independently
Privacy
Public record — will, assets, and beneficiaries accessible by anyone
Fully private — no public filing required
Average timeline
9–18 months (simple); up to 3+ years (contested)
3–12 months (most estates)
Typical cost
3–8% of gross estate value
0.5–1.5% of estate value (administration only)
Upfront setup cost
Low — a basic will costs $300–$1,000
Higher — trust drafting typically $1,500–$5,000+
Incapacity protection
None — a will only takes effect at death
Yes — successor trustee can manage assets if incapacitated
Multi-state property
Ancillary probate required in each state where real property is held
Single trust governs all property in all states
Creditor protection
Mandatory creditor notice and waiting period (30–180 days by state)
Creditor notice still required in most states; California requires 120 days
Ability to contest
Will contests can be filed in probate court
Trusts can be challenged, but typically harder to contest than wills
Complexity
Complex process; executor errors create personal liability
Requires trust to be properly funded — unfunded trusts fail
Sources: Uniform Probate Code, Uniform Trust Code, state-specific statutes. Costs are ranges — actual costs vary significantly by state and estate complexity.

Cost Comparison in Detail

Quick Answer
For a $500,000 estate, probate typically costs $15,000–$40,000 in combined fees. Trust administration typically costs $2,500–$7,500 — plus the one-time trust creation cost of $1,500–$5,000+.

What Probate Costs

Probate costs fall into four categories, all drawn from the estate before beneficiaries receive anything:

  • Attorney fees — 2–4% of estate value in most states. California, Florida, and a handful of others set statutory fee schedules. California allows 4% on the first $100,000, 3% on the next $100,000, and decreasing percentages on larger amounts. Cal. Prob. Code § 10810
  • Court filing fees — $150–$1,000+ depending on state and estate value
  • Executor compensation — often 2–4% of estate value, set by state statute or the will. Executors may waive compensation.
  • Appraiser, accountant, and publication fees — real property appraisals, creditor notice publication, and tax filings add several thousand dollars to most estates

What Trust Administration Costs

  • Successor trustee fees — individual trustees often waive fees if they are family members; corporate trustees typically charge 0.5–1.5% annually
  • Attorney fees for trust-specific legal work — deed transfers, tax filings, and any disputes
  • Accounting fees — trusts must provide accountings to beneficiaries
  • Trust creation cost (upfront, one-time) — a properly drafted revocable living trust typically costs $1,500–$5,000+ depending on complexity and attorney fees in your state
"For estates with significant assets — particularly real property — the long-term savings of trust administration typically exceed the upfront cost of creating and properly funding a trust."
Based on comparative analysis of state statutory fee schedules
Important

An unfunded trust does not avoid probate. A trust is only effective for assets actually titled in its name. Creating a trust and then failing to transfer assets into it is one of the most common and costly estate planning mistakes — those assets will still go through probate.

Privacy: Public Probate vs Private Trust

This distinction is significant and often underappreciated. When a will is filed for probate, it becomes a public court record — accessible by anyone, including creditors, distant relatives, the media, and people the deceased would never have wanted involved.

Probate — Public Record
  • The will is filed with the court and becomes publicly accessible
  • The estate inventory — every asset and its value — is a public document
  • Beneficiary names and the amounts they receive are public
  • In many jurisdictions, probate records are searchable online
  • Anyone can appear at the courthouse and review the file
Trust Administration — Private
  • The trust document is never filed with any court
  • Asset values and beneficiary identities remain private
  • Distribution amounts are known only to the parties involved
  • No public notice of the trust's existence or terms is required
  • Beneficiaries receive accountings but those accountings stay private

For high-net-worth families, business owners, or anyone who values privacy, this difference alone can justify the cost of establishing a trust. Contested estates are particularly exposed in probate — all filings, allegations, and financial details become part of the public record.

Incapacity Planning: A Key Trust Advantage

A will only takes effect at death. If you become incapacitated before dying — due to dementia, stroke, accident, or illness — a will provides no protection. Without a trust, your family may need to petition a court for a conservatorship or guardianship to manage your assets, which is expensive, time-consuming, and itself a matter of public record.

A revocable living trust addresses this directly. The trust document names a successor trustee who takes over management of trust assets if the original trustee becomes incapacitated — automatically, without court involvement. This is one of the most overlooked benefits of a trust, particularly for older adults or those with health concerns.

Planning Note

A durable power of attorney provides similar incapacity protection for assets held outside the trust. Most estate plans include both a revocable living trust and a durable power of attorney as complementary tools.

Multi-State Property: Why Trusts Win

If you own real property in more than one state at the time of death, a will-based estate plan requires probate in every state where you own property. This is called ancillary probate — a separate court proceeding in each additional state, with its own attorney fees, court fees, and timeline.

A revocable living trust eliminates this problem entirely. Because the trust owns the property — not you individually — there is no state-by-state probate to open. One trust, administered by one successor trustee, governs all property in all states. For anyone who owns real property in multiple states (a vacation home, investment property, or inherited land), this is a compelling economic argument for a trust.

See our full guide on Ancillary Probate (Out-of-State Property) for a complete explanation of the multi-state probate process.

When Probate Makes Sense vs When a Trust Makes Sense

Decision Guide
Consider Probate When…
  • The estate is small and most assets already have beneficiary designations
  • The estate qualifies for a simplified small estate affidavit procedure
  • Simplicity and low upfront cost are the priority
  • All real property is in a single state
  • The estate owner is young and incapacity planning is less urgent
  • The will is simple with a straightforward distribution plan
Consider a Trust When…
  • The estate has significant real property or assets above the state's small estate threshold
  • Real property is held in more than one state
  • Privacy is a priority — the family doesn't want asset details made public
  • Incapacity planning is a concern
  • Distribution involves complex conditions (minors, special needs beneficiaries, staggered payments)
  • Minimizing estate administration costs and timeline matters
Important

Even when a trust is the right approach, you still need a will. A pour-over will captures any assets not transferred into the trust during your lifetime and directs them into the trust at death. Without one, assets outside the trust are governed by your state's intestacy laws — regardless of the trust's terms.

The Successor Trustee: Trust Administration's Equivalent of an Executor

In probate, an executor (or administrator) is appointed by the court to manage the estate. In trust administration, a successor trustee named in the trust document takes over management automatically — no court appointment needed.

The successor trustee's duties include:

  • Inventorying trust assets and obtaining current valuations
  • Notifying beneficiaries of the trust's existence and their rights — required by the Uniform Trust Code and most state trust codes
  • Paying valid debts and taxes from trust assets
  • Providing accountings to beneficiaries documenting all income, expenses, and distributions
  • Distributing trust assets according to the trust's terms

Successor trustees have the same fiduciary duties as executors — they must act in the beneficiaries' best interests, avoid self-dealing, and manage trust assets prudently. Breaching these duties exposes the successor trustee to personal liability, just as it does for executors in probate.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does a trust avoid probate?+
Yes — but only for assets actually titled in the trust's name. A revocable living trust avoids probate for trust-owned assets because the trust, not the deceased, owns them. Assets not transferred into the trust before death may still go through probate. A pour-over will captures those assets and directs them into the trust through a simplified probate process.What Assets Avoid Probate →
Is a trust better than a will?+
Neither is universally better. A trust avoids probate, is private, provides incapacity protection, and is more cost-effective for larger estates. A will is simpler and cheaper to create. Most estate planning attorneys recommend a revocable living trust for estates with significant real property, multi-state assets, or complex distribution needs — combined with a pour-over will.What Is Probate? →
Do you still need a will if you have a trust?+
Yes. Even with a trust, you need a pour-over will. This document directs that any assets not transferred into the trust during your lifetime will "pour into" the trust at death. Without a will, those assets are distributed under your state's intestacy laws — which may not reflect your wishes.
How long does trust administration take?+
Trust administration typically takes 3–12 months, compared to probate's 9–18 month average. Because there is no court supervision, trust administration moves on the successor trustee's schedule. The main time driver is creditor resolution — California requires a 120-day notice period for trust creditors, for example. Multi-state trusts, complex assets, or beneficiary disputes can extend the timeline.How Long Does Probate Take? →
Can a trust be contested?+
Yes, trusts can be challenged — typically on grounds of lack of capacity, undue influence, fraud, or improper execution. However, trust challenges are generally harder to bring than will contests because trusts are private (there is no mandatory court filing that invites challenge) and because the standards for contesting a trust are high in most states. A trust contest is brought in civil court, not probate court.Can a Will Be Contested? →
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Written & Reviewed By
Legal Research Editor at ProbateLawCenter.org. Specializes in 50-state probate procedure research, estate administration timelines, and court filing requirements. Every guide is built from primary legal sources — state statutes, official court records, and government publications. View our research methodology →
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