When a family loses a parent who resided in a Brooklyn brownstone for forty years, the immediate aftermath usually involves sifting through decades of paperwork. Relatives frequently ask me if there is a centralized, statewide database where they can type in a name and download the deceased’s last will and testament. Almost every public record feels accessible from a smartphone. Estate planning operates under entirely different rules of privacy, custody, and stewardship.
The Reality of Private Legal Documents
A last will and testament is a fundamentally private document during the testator’s lifetime. There is no official digital repository for unfiled wills. When we draft an estate plan for a client, the original physical document—signed in wet ink and properly witnessed—is either stored in our fireproof firm vault or kept in the client’s personal safe. It does not get uploaded to a government cloud.
This privacy is deliberate. Under New York law—specifically EPTL §3-2.1—the formal execution of a will requires strict physical protocols, including the presence of two witnesses who must sign the document. Because a will can be revoked or amended at any point during the testator’s life, maintaining a static online database of living individuals’ wills would inevitably lead to outdated, invalid documents circulating as fact. Until the testator passes away, the location and contents of the will remain known only to the creator and the fiduciaries or attorneys they choose to inform.
Surrogate’s Court and the Public Record
The situation shifts entirely once the testator passes away and the probate process begins. Under SCPA Article 14, the original will must be filed with the Surrogate’s Court in the county where the deceased resided to be legally recognized. Once a will is offered for probate, it ceases to be a private document. It becomes public record.
This is where online searches become partially viable. New York offers a digital portal called WebSurrogate, allowing the public to search court dockets across the state. If a will has been submitted to the court, you can look up the estate by the deceased’s name and see if a probate proceeding is active.
WebSurrogate is primarily a docketing system. You can see that a will was filed, who the proposed executor is, and the names of the attorneys involved—but you cannot click a button to download a PDF of the will itself. To view the actual contents of the document, an interested party must visit the record room of the specific county courthouse or request physical copies by mail from the court clerk. The internet can tell you if the legal machinery has started, but it rarely hands you the instruction manual.
Tracking Down the Original Document
If the document has not yet been filed with the court, an online search yields nothing. The search requires physical legwork and a deliberate approach to discovering the deceased’s legal history.
I advise families to look first for the deceased’s estate planning attorney. Often, a photocopy of the will found in a desk drawer will bear the law firm’s cover page, backing, or watermark. Contacting that attorney is the most direct path to locating the original document. Firm custodianship is standard practice for many older estates.
Another common location is a safe deposit box at a local bank branch. If the family cannot access the box because they are not listed as co-owners, the law provides a specific remedy. Under SCPA §2003, an interested party can petition the Surrogate’s Court for an order allowing them to open the safe deposit box specifically to search for a will or burial plot deed. This inventory must occur in the presence of a bank officer. If a will is found, the bank is legally obligated to mail it directly to the Surrogate’s Court—not hand it to the family.
The Danger of Digital Substitutes
Families occasionally find digital scans of a will on a deceased parent’s computer or discover a draft attached to an old email. A photocopy or a digital scan is not legally binding. Surrogate’s Court demands the original, wet-ink document.
If the original will was last known to be in the possession of the deceased and cannot be found after death, New York law presumes the testator intentionally destroyed it to revoke it. Overcoming this presumption to admit a copy to probate is an expensive, uphill legal proceeding. A PDF on a hard drive is merely a clue to who drafted it and what the testator wanted at one specific moment in time. It is never a substitute for proper legacy stewardship.
Finding a will is just the first mechanical step in administering an estate. What matters more is ensuring the document you leave behind for your own family is secure, accessible to the right fiduciaries, and legally sound. If you are uncertain where your own estate documents are currently held, or if you suspect they are outdated, schedule a 30-minute document retrieval and review session with our office.





