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Florida Probate: The Complete Guide

Statewide Florida Probate · All 67 Counties · Free Consultation

📞 Free consultation: 877-206-0022

⭐ 4.9 Rating · 600+ Client Reviews · Florida Bar No. 0085615 · Statewide Service

Ley de Planificación Patrimonial y Sucesiones de Florida

Florida probate court documents

Nuestro bufete concentra una parte significativa de su práctica en las áreas de planificación patrimonial y derecho sucesorio de Florida. Proporcionamos a nuestros clientes soluciones personalizadas de planificación patrimonial que se ajustan a sus objetivos familiares y de preservación del patrimonio. Si usted no crea un plan de sucesión, el Estado de la Florida decidirá cómo se distribuirán sus activos a través del proceso de sucesión.

Para muchos de nuestros clientes, jóvenes o mayores, la responsabilidad de pasar por una sucesión puede ser extremadamente estresante y confusa. Deje que nuestra oficina le proporcione a usted y a su familia la comodidad de un camino claro hacia adelante para su sucesión.

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¿Qué es el sistema sucesorio de Florida?

La sucesión testamentaria es el proceso judicial de identificación y distribución de los bienes de una persona, ya sea según los términos de sus deseos detallados en sus documentos de planificación patrimonial o, alternativamente, a través de las normas de sucesión intestada de Florida.

El Tribunal apropiado para la legalización de un testamento en Florida suele ser (1) el condado en el que estaba domiciliado el difunto (la persona que falleció); (2) en el que se encuentran sus bienes; o (3) en el que reside cualquier deudor del difunto. De conformidad con la Ley de Florida 733.101.

Legalización de la herencia

Un Representante Personal será designado por el Tribunal o nombrado en su testamento. Esa persona tendrá la responsabilidad de supervisar el proceso sucesorio junto con un abogado que él o ella contrate. El Representante Personal será responsable de
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Preparación y presentación de declaraciones de la renta para el patrimonio.

Sucesiones en Florida

Localización de activos

Sucesiones en Florida

Búsqueda de documentos necesarios para la sucesión.

Sucesiones en Florida

Pago de facturas relacionadas con su patrimonio mientras se tramita.

Sucesiones en Florida

Determinación de los acreedores

Si usted es un representante personal, puede que estas tareas le resulten desalentadoras. Contar con la ayuda del abogado de sucesiones de Florida adecuado durante el proceso puede proporcionarle la información que necesita. Llámenos si tiene alguna pregunta o necesita ayuda con su sucesión en Florida.

Las Sucesiones en Florida se tramitarán como Administración Sumaria o Formal dependiendo del Patrimonio

Los Tribunales Sucesorios de Florida suelen funcionar en dos vías con procedimientos diferentes. El primero de estos procedimientos se conoce como Administración Sumaria. Este proceso está disponible si (1) una persona fallece con un testamento que no ordena la administración formal o sin testamento (intestado) y (2) el valor de todo el patrimonio es inferior a $75,000.00 o la persona falleció hace más de 2 años.

Alternativamente, si su sucesión no califica para una administración sumaria, tendrá que ser distribuida en una sucesión por administración formal. Este proceso puede ser muy complicado y detallado, pero por lo general consiste en notificar al Secretario Judicial el fallecimiento del difunto, seguido de la notificación a los acreedores y beneficiarios. A continuación, se pagan las deudas pendientes con cargo a la herencia y se hace un recuento de todos los bienes.

Por último, se solicitará a un Tribunal que apruebe la disolución definitiva de una sucesión y los bienes se distribuirán de acuerdo con los términos de la sucesión intestada de Florida o de acuerdo con los deseos del difunto en virtud de un testamento. Este proceso suele durar varios meses y requerirá la apertura de cuentas bancarias separadas, notificaciones a los acreedores y la posibilidad de tener que hacer frente a reclamaciones controvertidas de acreedores y beneficiarios.

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Florida Probate — By Location & Topic

We handle Florida probate matters in all 67 counties. Explore our county-specific probate resources and related estate planning topics:

Brandon / Hillsborough County Probate →

13th Judicial Circuit, Edgecomb Courthouse, Tampa. Our home office serves Hillsborough County families.

Lakeland / Polk County Probate →

10th Judicial Circuit, Bartow Courthouse. Polk, Hardee, and Highlands counties.

Sarasota County Probate →

12th Judicial Circuit, Sarasota Judicial Center. High retiree probate volume.

Estate Planning to Avoid Probate →

Florida estate planning, revocable trusts, Lady Bird Deeds, and POAs that keep your family out of probate.

Florida Probate Attorney Fees →

Detailed breakdown of statutory fees, court costs, and flat-fee alternatives.

Lady Bird Deed in Florida →

Florida-specific enhanced life-estate deed that passes your home outside probate.

Florida Probate — Frequently Asked Questions

What is Florida probate?

Florida probate is the court-supervised process for validating a will, paying creditors, and transferring titled assets from a deceased person’s estate to their heirs or beneficiaries. It is administered by the probate division of the appropriate Florida circuit court, governed by Chapter 733 of the Florida Statutes and the Florida Probate Rules.

When is probate required in Florida?

Probate is required in Florida whenever a deceased person owned assets titled solely in their name without a beneficiary designation. Assets titled jointly with right of survivorship, accounts with named beneficiaries (life insurance, 401(k), IRA, POD/TOD accounts), property in a revocable trust, and property transferred by Lady Bird Deed pass outside probate.

How long does Florida probate take?

Most Florida probate cases take 6 to 12 months from petition to final distribution. Formal administration of complex estates can run 12 to 24 months. Summary administration (for estates with non-exempt assets of $75,000 or less, or where the decedent has been deceased more than 2 years) typically wraps in 60 to 90 days.

How much does Florida probate cost?

Under Fla. Stat. § 733.6171, default attorney fees are 3% on the first $1,000,000 of estate value, 2.5% on the next $4,000,000, and reduced percentages above. Personal representative fees are set separately under Fla. Stat. § 733.617. Court filing fees and publication costs are additional. We offer flat-fee alternatives for many simpler estates and summary administrations.

What is the difference between formal and summary administration?

Formal administration is the standard Florida probate process — it appoints a personal representative who receives Letters of Administration, gives notice to creditors, inventories the estate, pays claims, and distributes assets. Summary administration is the expedited process for small estates (non-exempt assets $75,000 or less) or estates where the decedent died more than 2 years ago. Summary does not appoint a personal representative.

What assets avoid Florida probate?

Assets that pass outside Florida probate include: property held in a revocable living trust; joint tenancy with right of survivorship; accounts with named beneficiaries (401(k), IRA, life insurance); payable-on-death (POD) bank accounts; transfer-on-death (TOD) investment accounts; homestead property protected by Florida Constitution Article X, § 4; and real estate transferred by a Lady Bird Deed (enhanced life-estate deed).

Who can serve as personal representative in Florida?

Florida law (Fla. Stat. § 733.302-.304) requires the personal representative to be either a Florida resident, or — if a non-resident — a legally adopted child or adoptive parent, a relative by blood, marriage, or adoption, or the spouse of any of these. Banks and trust companies authorized to do business in Florida may also serve. Convicted felons and minors are disqualified.

What are Letters of Administration?

Letters of Administration are the official court order issued by a Florida probate judge that confirms the personal representative’s authority to act for the estate. Banks, title companies, and other third parties typically require certified copies of the Letters before releasing or transferring estate assets. Letters are typically issued within a few weeks of filing the petition for formal administration.

How do creditor claims work in Florida probate?

Under Fla. Stat. § 733.701-.702, the personal representative must publish notice to creditors in a newspaper of general circulation and serve known creditors directly. Known creditors have 30 days from personal service or 3 months from first publication (whichever is later) to file claims. Unknown creditors have 2 years from the date of death under Fla. Stat. § 733.710 statute of repose.

What is ancillary probate in Florida?

Ancillary probate is a secondary Florida probate opened when a non-Florida-resident decedent owned real estate or personal property in Florida. Under Fla. Stat. § 734.102, the Florida court has authority over the Florida-situs assets. This is most common with seasonal residents who lived elsewhere but owned a Florida home or condo. The primary probate happens in the decedent’s home state; we handle the Florida side.

Do I need a lawyer to handle Florida probate?

In most cases, yes. Florida Probate Rule 5.030 requires the personal representative in formal administration to be represented by a Florida-licensed attorney, unless the personal representative is the sole interested person or is themselves a Florida-licensed attorney. Summary administration can sometimes be filed pro se, but the procedural complexity and the personal representative’s fiduciary exposure make legal representation a meaningful protection.

What is homestead property in Florida probate?

Florida homestead — the decedent’s primary residence — has special protected status under Florida Constitution Article X, § 4. Homestead passes outside probate to a surviving spouse and minor children with significant protection from creditors. Homestead can be devised by will only in limited circumstances. Determining homestead status often requires a separate court order (Petition to Determine Homestead Status) under Fla. Prob. R. 5.405.

When Is Florida Probate Required? Asset-by-Asset

Florida probate is not always necessary. The general rule: assets pass through probate only when they were titled solely in the decedent’s name without an automatic transfer mechanism (joint title, beneficiary designation, trust, etc.). Here is how common asset types fare:

Asset TypeProbate?Why
Bank account, solely titled, no POD/TOD beneficiaryYESNo automatic transfer mechanism — court order required
Bank account, joint with right of survivorshipNOPasses by operation of law to surviving joint owner
Bank account with POD beneficiaryNOPayable-on-death designation overrides probate
401(k), IRA, or pension with named beneficiaryNOBeneficiary designation controls — bypasses probate
401(k), IRA with NO named beneficiaryYESDefault payable to the estate — probate required
Life insurance with named beneficiaryNOContract controls; proceeds bypass the estate
Life insurance payable to estateYESProceeds flow into probate
Real estate, solely titledYESTitle cannot pass without a court order
Real estate, joint with right of survivorshipNOSurvivor takes title automatically
Real estate in revocable living trustNOTrust controls — that is the entire point of the trust
Real estate transferred by Lady Bird DeedNOEnhanced life estate vests automatically at death
Florida homestead with surviving spouse/minor childrenSPECIALArticle X § 4 — passes outside probate but requires court determination of homestead status
Vehicles, solely titled (one or two)SUMMARYDHSMV summary transfer process available — full probate often not needed
Business interests, solely ownedYESCourt order needed to transfer ownership
Tangible personal property in the homeDEPENDSIf part of probate estate, distributed per will or intestate share

This table is general guidance, not legal advice — exceptions exist for every category. Call 877-206-0022 for a free review of your specific situation.

Common Florida Probate Scenarios

Most Florida probates fall into one of these six patterns. The right strategy and timeline depend on which one fits your case.

Decedent died with a will

The will names a personal representative and distributes assets. We file the petition, qualify the PR, and administer per the will. Typical timeline: 6-12 months for uncontested estates with straightforward assets.

Decedent died intestate (no will)

Florida’s intestate succession statute (Fla. Stat. § 732.101 et seq.) controls distribution. Surviving spouse takes either 100% or 50%, depending on whether descendants exist and whether they are also children of the spouse. We petition for administration and ensure the right heirs are identified and notified.

Out-of-state decedent owned Florida real estate

Florida opens ancillary probate under Fla. Stat. § 734.102. The primary (domiciliary) probate happens in the decedent’s home state; we handle the Florida side — typically faster and less expensive than a full Florida probate.

Someone is contesting the will

Will contests are filed under Fla. Stat. § 733.107 — typical grounds are lack of testamentary capacity, undue influence, fraud, improper execution, or revocation. We defend or prosecute these claims. The will contest pauses distribution and significantly extends the timeline.

Decedent received Florida Medicaid

Florida pursues estate recovery against the probate estate under Fla. Stat. § 409.9101. Homestead is generally protected from Medicaid recovery. We coordinate with AHCA claims, navigate hardship waivers where applicable, and protect exempt property.

Estate has more debt than assets

Florida law sets a strict priority order for paying claims (Fla. Stat. § 733.707) and allows the personal representative to formally close an insolvent estate without personal liability if the procedure is followed correctly. We sequence payments and protect the PR from claims of preference or breach of fiduciary duty.

How Florida Formal Probate Works: Step-by-Step

Formal administration is the standard Florida probate track for estates with non-exempt assets over $75,000. Here is exactly what happens, in order.

1

Free Initial Consultation

30 minutes by phone or video, no obligation. We review the death certificate, any will, and the asset list to identify whether formal administration, summary administration, or ancillary probate fits your situation — and what the realistic cost and timeline look like.

2

File the Petition for Administration

We prepare and file the Petition for Administration in the proper Florida circuit court — typically the county where the decedent was domiciled (Fla. Stat. § 733.101). We also file the original will (if any), the oath of personal representative, and any required waivers.

3

Court Issues Letters of Administration

Once the judge enters the order, the clerk issues Letters of Administration — the official document banks, title companies, and brokerages need before releasing estate assets. Letters typically issue within 2 to 6 weeks of filing, depending on the county and any objections.

4

Notice to Creditors

Under Fla. Stat. § 733.2121, the personal representative publishes notice in a newspaper of general circulation in the county and serves known or reasonably ascertainable creditors directly. Known creditors get 30 days from service; unknown creditors get 3 months from first publication.

5

Inventory and Appraisal

Within 60 days of issuance of Letters (Fla. Prob. R. 5.340), the personal representative files a verified inventory of all probate assets with the court and serves it on interested persons. Real estate may require an appraisal; closely-held business interests may require valuation experts.

6

Resolve Creditor Claims

Valid claims get paid in the statutory priority order under Fla. Stat. § 733.707 (admin expenses → funeral expenses → taxes → Class 5 claims). Disputed claims trigger objection procedures and may require independent action filed by the creditor within 30 days of the objection.

7

Distribution, Accounting, and Discharge

After all valid debts and taxes are paid, the personal representative distributes the remaining assets per the will or intestate succession, files a final accounting (Fla. Prob. R. 5.346), obtains receipts and waivers from beneficiaries, and petitions for discharge — closing the estate.

Month-by-Month Florida Probate Timeline

A typical uncontested formal Florida probate runs 9 to 14 months from filing to discharge. Complex estates, contested wills, or significant tax issues can extend this to 18-30 months. Here is what happens when:

TimingPhaseWhat Happens
Weeks 1-2Death & Document GatheringOrder certified copies of the death certificate (long form). Locate the original will (Florida law requires the original — copies face additional procedural hurdles). Identify the executor named in the will, or the heirs if no will exists. Collect financial statements, deed copies, and beneficiary information.
Month 1Petition FiledWe file the Petition for Administration in the proper county circuit court along with the original will, the oath of personal representative, and supporting documents. Filing fee is set by statute.
Month 2-3Letters of Administration IssuedOnce the court approves the petition, Letters of Administration are issued. The personal representative now has authority to act for the estate — open the estate bank account, access financial accounts, and begin gathering assets.
Month 2-3Notice to Creditors PublishedFirst publication starts the 3-month creditor period for unknown creditors. Known creditors are served directly and have 30 days from service to file claims.
Month 2-4Inventory FiledWithin 60 days of Letters, the personal representative files a verified inventory of probate assets with the court (Fla. Prob. R. 5.340).
Month 5-6Creditor Claim Period ClosesThe 3-month creditor period ends. The personal representative reviews all timely claims, pays valid ones in statutory priority order, and objects to invalid claims.
Month 6-9Asset Liquidation & Claim ResolutionReal estate is sold or distributed in kind, investment accounts are closed, vehicles are transferred or sold. Disputed creditor claims are resolved through objection procedures or independent actions.
Month 9-11Tax Returns & Final AccountingFinal federal income tax return for the decedent (Form 1040) and estate fiduciary return (Form 1041) are filed. Florida has no estate tax, but federal estate tax may apply for estates over the federal exemption.
Month 10-12DistributionAfter all debts and taxes are paid and reserves set aside, the personal representative distributes remaining assets to beneficiaries per the will or intestate succession.
Month 11-12+DischargeFinal accounting filed with the court along with petition for discharge. Once approved, the estate is officially closed and the personal representative is released from further duties.

Documents You’ll Need to File Florida Probate

Bring what you have to your first meeting — we will work with whatever is available and help you obtain the rest:

Death certificate
Order at least 5 certified long-form copies from the Florida Bureau of Vital Statistics or the funeral home. Each financial institution typically wants its own original.
Original will
Florida Fla. Stat. § 732.901 requires the original will to be deposited with the clerk within 10 days of learning of the death. Copies are accepted only with additional procedural steps under Fla. Stat. § 733.207 (Lost or Destroyed Will).
Codicils
Any amendments to the will. Same originality requirement applies.
Trust documents (if any)
Revocable trust, irrevocable trust, special needs trust — the trustee’s authority and administration are governed by the trust, not the probate court.
Asset inventory list
Bank accounts, investment accounts, retirement accounts, real estate, vehicles, business interests, valuable personal property. Include current balances or estimated values.
Beneficiary designations
401(k), IRA, life insurance, annuity beneficiary forms. These often control who gets the asset regardless of the will.
Deeds to real property
Florida and out-of-state. The deed tells us how title was held and whether the property bypasses probate.
Recent financial statements
Last 6-12 months of bank and investment account statements to verify balances and identify any transfers.
List of beneficiaries/heirs
Names, addresses, dates of birth, relationship to decedent. Required for the petition and notice.
Names of known creditors
Mortgage holders, credit card issuers, medical providers, the IRS, any unpaid utilities. We will send each statutorily-required notice.

When Florida Probate Gets Complicated

Most Florida probates close without litigation. These are the six issues that, when they do arise, define the next 12+ months of the case:

Concurso de Voluntarios

A beneficiary or omitted heir challenges the validity of the will. Common grounds: lack of testamentary capacity, undue influence, fraud, improper execution, or revocation. Florida Statute § 733.107 governs the burden of proof — typically on the contestant, unless the proponent stands in a confidential relationship and actively procured the will, which shifts the burden.

Creditor Disputes

A creditor files an inflated claim or claims an unsecured debt should take priority. Personal representatives must object within 30 days under Fla. Stat. § 733.705(2). Once objected to, the creditor has 30 days to file an independent action — failure to do so bars the claim.

Missing or Damaged Will

Florida requires the original will (Fla. Stat. § 732.901). When only a copy exists, the proponent must overcome a presumption that the decedent revoked it by destruction. Fla. Stat. § 733.207 (lost or destroyed wills) sets a higher evidentiary bar.

Personal Representative Misconduct

Self-dealing, commingling estate funds, failing to account, or favoring one beneficiary over others all expose the personal representative to removal under Fla. Stat. § 733.504 and surcharge. Beneficiaries have standing to petition for removal and accounting.

Homestead Disputes

Article X, § 4 of the Florida Constitution gives surviving spouses and minor children powerful homestead protections. Disputes arise over whether the property qualified as homestead, whether a devise was permitted, and how proceeds of a sale flow.

Out-of-State Beneficiary Conflicts

Non-Florida heirs sometimes resist Florida probate procedures or attempt to litigate in their home state. Florida circuit courts retain jurisdiction over Florida-situs assets; we coordinate with out-of-state counsel where needed.

What does Florida probate cost?

Florida sets default probate attorney fees by statute. Under Fla. Stat. § 733.6171, the reasonable-fee schedule is:

  • 3% on the first $1,000,000 of estate value
  • 2.5% on the next $4,000,000 (i.e., from $1M to $5M)
  • 2% on the next $5,000,000 (i.e., from $5M to $10M)
  • 1.5% on amounts above $10,000,000

Personal representative compensation is set separately under Fla. Stat. § 733.617 at similar percentages. Court filing fees, publication costs, and bond premiums (if required) are additional.

For simpler estates and summary administrations we offer flat-fee alternatives that often save the family money. Most cases run between $3,500 and $5,000 in attorney fees, depending on estate size and complexity.

We provide a written engagement letter with the agreed fee structure before any work begins.

Ready to discuss Florida probate? Speak with an attorney today.

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Formal de Florida
Administración Testamentaria

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Cómo gestionar los bienes de Florida cuando la sucesión se inicia en otro estado

Brice Zoecklein, Esq.
About the Author

Brice Zoecklein, Esq.

Managing Attorney, Zoecklein Law, P.A.

Florida Bar No. 0085615 · Stetson Law (J.D. cum laude) · Statewide Florida practice in probate, trust litigation, and estate planning.

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