A client once came to my office holding his late mother’s will, certain it was all he needed to take ownership of the family brownstone in Brooklyn. He was surprised, and frankly frustrated, to learn the will was not a key to the house. It was a roadmap to Surrogate’s Court. This is a common misconception I see in my practice—that having a will allows you to bypass the probate process. In reality, a will is the very document that directs it.
The Default Path: Surrogate’s Court
Probate is the court-supervised process for validating a will and administering an estate. Think of it as the state’s default system for transferring wealth. When a person dies with assets titled solely in their name, there is no automatic mechanism to pass them on. Someone needs the legal authority to collect those assets, pay any outstanding debts and taxes, and distribute what remains to the rightful heirs. Surrogate’s Court grants that authority.
Your will is your set of instructions to the court and to the executor you nominate. It names who should be in charge and who should receive your property. But the court must first officially appoint your executor and grant them the power to act. This process—probate—is public, can be time-consuming, and often incurs legal and court fees that are paid from the estate’s assets. It is the system’s catch-all, designed to handle estates that lack a more direct, private plan.
Assets That Trigger a Probate Filing
The need for probate isn’t determined by the size of the estate, but by the type of assets and how they were owned. Certain assets are almost guaranteed to require a court proceeding if they are held in the decedent’s name alone.
These typically include:
- Real Estate: A house, co-op, or condominium owned solely by the deceased individual.
- Bank or Brokerage Accounts: Checking, savings, or investment accounts with no named beneficiary or joint owner.
- Personal Property: Valuable items like art, jewelry, or vehicles without a clear transfer mechanism.
New York does offer a simplified process for smaller estates. Under Surrogate’s Court Procedure Act (SCPA) Article 13, an estate with less than $50,000 in personal property can be settled through a voluntary administration, which is faster and less formal. For many New York families, however, the value of a single bank account or investment portfolio easily exceeds this threshold, making a full probate proceeding necessary.
Intentional Planning to Bypass Probate
Avoiding probate is not about finding a loophole. It is the result of deliberate planning. Stewardship. It involves structuring your assets so they pass directly to your chosen heirs outside of the court system. This is achieved through legal tools that create an automatic transfer upon death.
The most common and effective methods we use for our clients include:
1. Revocable Living Trusts: This is the cornerstone of many probate-avoidance plans. You transfer your assets—your home, your investment accounts—into a trust during your lifetime. You continue to control them as the trustee. Upon your death, a successor trustee you’ve named steps in and distributes the assets according to your instructions in the trust document. No court involvement is needed for assets held by the trust.
2. Beneficiary Designations: Many financial accounts allow you to name a beneficiary directly. Life insurance policies and retirement accounts (like 401(k)s and IRAs) are the most common examples. You can also add a “Payable-on-Death” (POD) designation to bank accounts or a “Transfer-on-Death” (TOD) registration to brokerage accounts. These are contractual arrangements that operate like a will for that specific asset, and they supersede any instructions in your actual will.
3. Joint Tenancy with Rights of Survivorship (JTWROS): When property is owned as JTWROS, the surviving joint owner automatically inherits the entire asset. This is common for married couples owning a home or a joint bank account. While it avoids probate on the first death, it is an inflexible tool and can create unintended consequences, so it must be used with caution as part of a broader plan.
Probate is not inherently bad—it is a necessary, orderly process for estates that require it. But for many families, the time, expense, and public nature of the process are burdens they would rather not leave behind. A prudent estate plan ensures that the transfer of your legacy is as seamless and private as you intend it to be.
A productive first step is to create a simple inventory of your major assets and note how each one is titled. Schedule a consultation with our firm to review this inventory. In that meeting, we can identify which of your assets are currently on a direct path to probate and discuss the structures needed to align your estate with your long-term goals for your family.




