An Executor’s Duty: Managing Mail After a Death

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An executor for a Brooklyn estate I handled years ago almost missed a six-figure tax lien. The notice from the IRS went to the decedent’s old apartment, where it sat in a pile of junk mail for weeks. It was only found by chance when the family did a final clean-out. This is more than an inconvenience—it’s a breach of duty waiting to happen. Managing a deceased person’s mail is not a trivial administrative task. It is a foundational act of stewardship for the person entrusted with settling an estate.

Your Authority as a Fiduciary Begins with the Mail

When a person dies, their financial life does not stop. Bills continue to arrive, bank statements are issued, and government agencies send correspondence. As an executor or administrator, your first job is to gain control over this flow of information. Forwarding mail from the decedent’s last address to your own, or to our firm’s office, is one of the first things we do after the Surrogate’s Court issues Letters Testamentary.

Why is this so critical? Because that mail contains the roadmap of the estate. It helps identify assets you did not know existed, like an old 401(k) or a small life insurance policy. More importantly, it reveals the estate’s liabilities. Under the New York Surrogate’s Court Procedure Act (SCPA), an executor has a duty to ascertain and pay the decedent’s legitimate debts. For example, SCPA § 1802 gives creditors a seven-month window after Letters are issued to present their claims. If you do not receive the mail, you cannot know who is owed money, putting you and the estate at risk.

Failing to reroute mail is a failure to secure the estate. It leaves the door open for identity theft, missed payments that lead to penalties, and lawsuits from creditors who were never properly notified.

The Practical Steps for Securing Postal Mail

The United States Postal Service has specific procedures for handling the mail of a deceased individual. You cannot walk into a post office and fill out a standard change-of-address form. You must prove you have the legal authority to act on behalf of the estate.

To initiate a mail forward, the court-appointed executor or administrator must present several documents in person at the decedent’s local post office:

  • A completed USPS Form 3575. This is the official change-of-address form.
  • Proof of identity. Your own government-issued photo ID is required.
  • Proof of your appointment as fiduciary. This means bringing your original Letters Testamentary or Letters of Administration, which bear the court’s seal. A copy will not suffice.

The clerk will verify these documents and process the request. It is a simple procedure, but one that can only be done once the Surrogate’s Court has formally recognized your authority. Attempting this before you are legally appointed is improper and will be rejected.

Beyond the Post Office: Direct Notification is Key

Forwarding mail is the first step, not the last. The real work is contacting each institution directly to update their records. Mail forwarding is temporary—usually for one year—and not entirely foolproof. Some mail, especially from financial institutions or government agencies marked “Return Service Requested,” may be sent back to the sender instead of being forwarded.

This is why we build a communications plan for every estate we administer. We methodically contact key parties to formally notify them of the death and provide the executor’s contact information. This list always includes:

  • Financial Institutions: Banks, credit unions, brokerage firms, and mortgage lenders.
  • Government Agencies: The Social Security Administration, Medicare, the Department of Veterans Affairs, and the IRS.
  • Insurance Companies: Life, health, auto, and homeowner’s insurance providers.
  • Pension and Retirement Plan Administrators: Companies that manage 401(k)s, IRAs, or pension benefits.
  • Creditors: Credit card companies, auto loan financers, and any other known lenders.

Each notification requires a certified copy of the death certificate and a copy of your Letters Testamentary. It is a deliberate process, but it is the only way to formally establish your role as the estate’s fiduciary and ensure all future correspondence is directed properly. It closes loops, prevents miscommunication, and protects the estate—and you—from liability.

If you are named as an executor in a will, the responsibilities can feel immediate and overwhelming. The first step is to petition the Surrogate’s Court for the authority to act. We can prepare that petition and, once you are appointed, help you create a checklist for securing the estate, starting with the decedent’s mail.

DISCLAIMER: The information provided in this blog is for informational purposes only and should not be considered legal advice. The content of this blog may not reflect the most current legal developments. No attorney-client relationship is formed by reading this blog or contacting Morgan Legal Group PLLP.

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