A client’s mother passes away in her home on Long Island. Tucked in a safe deposit box is her will, properly signed and witnessed. The family believes the hard part is over. But a will is not self-executing. It is a set of instructions that, in most cases, must be validated by a court before it has legal authority. This process is called probate.
I’ve seen this scenario play out countless times. A family believes a will is the final word, only to discover it’s the starting point of a court-supervised process. The core question is not whether the will exists, but what assets it controls. The answer determines the path forward.
Assets That Trigger the Probate Process
Probate is the formal procedure where the Surrogate’s Court confirms a will’s validity and officially appoints the executor. This appointment gives the executor legal power—called Letters Testamentary—to act on behalf of the estate. Without this authority, banks, brokerage houses, and property clerks will not transfer assets.
The need for probate hinges on the type of assets the decedent owned. We look for assets titled solely in the deceased person’s name with no designated beneficiary. These are often called “probate assets” and can include:
- Real estate owned individually, not jointly with rights of survivorship.
- Bank or investment accounts held in the decedent’s name alone.
- Personal property, such as cars, jewelry, or art, without a co-owner.
Conversely, some assets pass outside of probate by operation of law. These “non-probate assets” are transferred directly to a named person or entity, regardless of what the will says. Common examples include life insurance policies with a named beneficiary, retirement accounts like a 401(k) or IRA, and property held in a trust. For these, the will is irrelevant—the beneficiary designation or trust document controls.
The Small Estate Exception in New York
Not every estate requires a full probate proceeding. New York law provides a simplified process for modest estates, avoiding a lengthy court procedure disproportionate to the assets involved.
This is known as a Voluntary Administration or a small estate proceeding. Under Surrogate’s Court Procedure Act (SCPA) Article 13, if a person’s personal property is valued at $50,000 or less (excluding real estate), the executor named in the will can file a simple affidavit to collect and distribute the assets. It is faster, less expensive, and avoids the more formal requirements of a full probate.
This simplified path has strict limits. It is unavailable if the estate includes real estate or if personal property exceeds the $50,000 threshold. In those cases, the estate must proceed through formal probate.
When a Formal Probate Filing is Unavoidable
Sometimes, a full probate is the only way to properly settle an estate. This is most common when the primary asset is a home or cooperative apartment titled solely in the decedent’s name. To sell that property and distribute the proceeds, the executor needs the authority granted by the Surrogate’s Court.
Probate also provides a critical legal forum for resolving disputes. If a family member believes the will is invalid—perhaps due to undue influence or lack of capacity—they can file an objection. The probate process is the legal framework for hearing these will contests, examining evidence, and reaching a binding judicial decision. It establishes a clear chain of title for assets and provides a deadline for creditors to make claims against the estate, protecting beneficiaries from future liabilities.
The executor has a fiduciary duty to marshal the assets, pay the decedent’s debts, and distribute the remainder according to the will. Probate is the process that empowers and supervises them in this important role. Stewardship.
The Alternative: Intentional Trust Planning
Probate is the default process for estates governed by a will. But it is not the only way to transfer a legacy. For many of the families and executives we represent, the goal is to avoid the court system entirely. We achieve this for our clients through deliberate planning, most often with a revocable living trust.
When assets are transferred into a trust during one’s lifetime, they are no longer part of the probate estate upon death. The trust owns them. The successor trustee—chosen by you—can then manage and distribute those assets according to your instructions, without court intervention. This is a private, efficient, and often less contentious way to handle generational wealth transfer. It is the result of intentional design, not a reaction to a legal default.
If you have been named an executor or are facing uncertainty about how a family member’s assets are titled, the first step is to create a clear inventory of the estate. We can guide you through this initial assessment to determine whether a court filing is required and what the most prudent path forward looks like.


