When a Manhattan resident passes away, leaving behind a brownstone, a scattered brokerage portfolio, and a final uncashed pension check, the named executor often assumes they can immediately step in to manage the funds. They carry the death certificate and the original will to their local bank branch, expecting to deposit the deceased’s final checks or transfer the balances into their personal account for safekeeping. The teller, however, will slide the paperwork back across the counter and refuse the transaction. Without an official estate account, that money cannot move.
This scenario surprises many first-time executors. Being named in a will does not automatically grant you access to the deceased’s money. It merely gives you the right to petition the Surrogate’s Court for that authority. Once the court formally appoints you—issuing Letters Testamentary if there was a will, or Letters of Administration if there was not—your first operational task is to open an estate account.
The Financial Vessel of Probate
An estate account is a temporary financial vessel designed to hold the deceased’s liquid assets during the probate process. When an individual dies, their social security number essentially dies with them for banking purposes. You cannot continue to operate their personal checking or savings accounts indefinitely.
Instead, the IRS issues a new Employer Identification Number (EIN) specifically for the estate. Using this EIN, the court-issued Letters, and the death certificate, the executor opens a brand-new checking account in the name of the estate. Every liquid asset the deceased owned—whether it is $5,000 sitting in an old credit union account, a $50,000 life insurance payout payable to the estate, or the proceeds from selling the decedent’s car—must be funneled into this single, centralized account.
The Strict Rule Against Commingling
The most critical function of the estate account is establishing a hard boundary between the deceased’s money and the executor’s personal money. New York law is exceptionally strict regarding how a fiduciary handles another person’s property.
Under the Estates, Powers and Trusts Law (EPTL) §11-1.6, fiduciaries are explicitly prohibited from commingling estate funds with their own personal assets. If you deposit a rent check from your late father’s investment property into your own personal checking account, you have committed a breach of fiduciary duty. This remains true even if your intentions are pure, even if you keep meticulous spreadsheets, and even if you never spend a single cent of that money on yourself.
The act of mixing the funds is a direct violation of the statute. I always remind our clients that acting as an executor is an exercise in deliberate stewardship, not casual management. If a dispute arises among the heirs—perhaps a sibling questions how the money is being managed—a commingled bank account is indefensible in court. The estate account protects the executor just as much as it protects the beneficiaries by providing a legally recognized, entirely separate custodian for the estate’s wealth.
Managing Debts and Creditor Claims
Before a single dollar can be legally distributed to an heir, the estate’s debts must be satisfied. An estate account acts as the central clearinghouse for this process, providing a clean audit trail of every obligation paid.
Executors carry a personal liability risk if they distribute funds to beneficiaries before paying legitimate creditors. The Surrogate’s Court Procedure Act (SCPA) §1811 outlines a strict statutory priority in which an estate’s debts must be paid. Funeral expenses and the administrative costs of the estate come first, followed by taxes owed to the federal government or New York State, followed by judgments, and finally general unsecured claims like credit card debt.
If you pay a low-priority credit card bill while ignoring a high-priority tax lien, or if you drain the account to pay the beneficiaries and leave the IRS empty-handed, creditors can pursue you personally for the shortfall. Running every transaction through the estate account ensures debts are paid in the exact order required by law. Furthermore, New York allows creditors seven months from the date Letters are issued to file a formal claim against the estate. The estate account securely holds the funds during this waiting period, ensuring the money is there if a valid claim arrives.
The Foundation for a Final Accounting
Eventually, the administration process reaches its conclusion. The house is sold, the taxes are filed, the seven-month creditor period expires, and all legitimate debts are paid. The final step before closing the estate is to provide an accounting to the beneficiaries, detailing exactly what came in and what went out.
This is where the estate account proves its ultimate value. Because every cent of income was deposited here, and every expense was paid from here, the account statements serve as a perfect, verifiable ledger. Accountability. There is no guessing, no estimating, and no need to untangle personal grocery purchases from estate utility bills. The executor can present a clear, transparent accounting to the heirs. Once the beneficiaries sign off on the accounting, the executor cuts the final generational distribution checks directly from the estate account. The balance drops to zero, the account is closed, and the legacy is successfully transferred.
If you have recently been named as an executor and need to understand the financial mechanics of probate, we establish the framework required to proceed safely. Request a fiduciary duties review with our office to examine your court documents, outline your immediate obligations under New York law, and establish a clear roadmap for the estate’s administration.




