A family in Brooklyn finds their mother’s last will and testament tucked away in her desk. There’s a sense of relief—she had a plan. They believe this document is the key that unlocks her assets and allows them to follow her wishes immediately. But when they call my office, they are often surprised to learn that the will is not the end of the legal process. It’s the beginning of one. The will doesn’t bypass Surrogate’s Court; it directs it.
The Will: Your Instructions for the Court
I’ve spent my career helping families understand that a will is not a self-executing document. Think of it as a set of nominations and instructions submitted for court approval through a process called probate. The court’s first job is to validate the will—to confirm it was signed correctly and is the final testamentary instrument of the person who died.
Once the will is admitted to probate, the court formally appoints the person named as executor. This appointment grants the executor legal authority—what we call Letters Testamentary—to act on behalf of the estate. Without this court order, an executor has no power to access bank accounts, sell property, or transfer assets. Their role is one of stewardship, a fiduciary duty to manage the estate according to the will’s instructions and for the benefit of the heirs. Probate is the legal framework that enforces that duty.
Assets That Trigger the Probate Process
What assets require probate? The answer lies in how an asset is titled. Any asset held solely in the decedent’s name, with no named beneficiary or joint owner, is a probate asset. This is the property that the executor must gather, manage, and distribute under court supervision.
Common probate assets include:
- Real estate owned individually.
- Bank or brokerage accounts in the decedent’s name alone.
- A car, boat, or other titled personal property.
- An interest in a business owned as a sole proprietor.
It’s the titling that matters—not the value. A $5,000 bank account in the decedent’s sole name is a probate asset. A $1 million life insurance policy with a named beneficiary is not. For smaller estates, New York does offer a simplified procedure. Under SCPA Article 13, estates with personal property valued under $50,000 can pursue a “small estate” or voluntary administration, which is a faster and less formal process. But even this is a court proceeding. It is not automatic.
Intentional Planning to Bypass Surrogate’s Court
While a will itself doesn’t avoid probate, other planning instruments can. This is where deliberate, generational planning makes a profound difference. The goal isn’t to “beat the system” but to create a private and efficient transfer of your legacy.
The most effective tool for this is a revocable living trust. When you create and fund a trust, you retitle your assets from your individual name into the name of the trust. As the trustee, you retain full control during your lifetime. Upon your death, the assets are owned by the trust, not by you. Your successor trustee—whom you’ve chosen—can then step in to administer and distribute the assets according to the trust’s terms, entirely outside the supervision of the Surrogate’s Court. It’s a private affair.
Other non-probate transfers include:
- Beneficiary Designations: Life insurance policies and retirement accounts (like IRAs and 401(k)s) pass directly to the individuals you have named as beneficiaries.
- Joint Ownership: Property owned as “joint tenants with rights of survivorship” automatically passes to the surviving owner.
- Payable-on-Death (POD) or Transfer-on-Death (TOD) Accounts: Bank and brokerage accounts can be set up to transfer directly to a named person upon your death.
Each of these requires an intentional act. It requires foresight and a clear understanding of how your assets are structured. A will handles everything else—the probate estate. But with prudent planning, you can decide how much or how little “everything else” includes.
A Foundation, Not a Final Step
A will is the foundational document of almost any estate plan. It names guardians for minor children—a critical function no other document can perform. It acts as a safety net, catching any assets that might have been left out of a trust or not properly titled. But viewing it as a tool to avoid probate is a fundamental misunderstanding of its purpose. Its purpose is to guide the probate process, ensuring your wishes are known and legally binding.
The first step is understanding which of your assets are currently exposed to the court process. I invite you to schedule a legacy audit with our firm. We can review your existing asset titling and beneficiary designations to identify which parts of your estate would require court intervention and discuss the structure that best serves your family’s future.




