Small Estate Procedures: Affidavits and Summary Administration

Small estate procedures allow heirs and beneficiaries to transfer a decedent's assets without opening a full probate court proceeding. These mechanisms — principally the small estate affidavit and summary administration — exist in every U.S. state but vary significantly in their dollar thresholds, eligible asset types, and procedural requirements. Understanding the classification boundaries between these tools and conventional probate determines which path an estate can lawfully take.

Definition and scope

Small estate procedures are statutory shortcuts embedded in each state's probate code that permit abbreviated or affidavit-based asset transfer when a decedent's qualifying estate falls below a legislatively defined dollar ceiling. The two primary instruments are:

Both procedures are creatures of state statute, not federal law. The Uniform Probate Code (UPC), promulgated by the Uniform Law Commission and adopted in whole or in part by 18 states as of the ULC's published adoption records, provides model language for both mechanisms under Article III (informal proceedings) and Article IV (collection of personal property by affidavit).

Dollar thresholds differ sharply by state. California's small estate affidavit threshold was set at $184,500 under California Probate Code § 13100 (subject to triennial adjustment). Texas permits an affidavit of heirship for real property transfers under Texas Estates Code § 203.001 without a dollar cap in certain circumstances. Florida's summary administration is governed by Florida Statutes §§ 735.201–735.301 and applies when the estate value does not exceed $75,000 or when the decedent has been dead for more than two years.

How it works

The affidavit pathway and the summary administration pathway follow distinct procedural sequences.

Small estate affidavit — typical sequence:

  1. Successor confirms that the decedent's qualifying assets fall below the state threshold (personal property only in most states; some states extend to real property).
  2. A statutory waiting period elapses — commonly 30 to 45 days after death, though California requires 40 days under § 13100.
  3. The successor executes a sworn affidavit identifying themselves, the decedent, the specific asset, and the legal basis for entitlement.
  4. The affidavit is presented directly to the asset holder (bank, brokerage, DMV) along with a certified death certificate.
  5. The asset holder releases the asset without court involvement, provided the affidavit conforms to statutory requirements.

Summary administration — typical sequence:

  1. A petition is filed in the probate division of the appropriate state court.
  2. Notice is provided to known creditors and interested parties (shorter notice periods than standard administration — Florida requires 30 days).
  3. The court reviews the petition and, if the statutory criteria are met, enters an order of summary administration directing distribution.
  4. Distribution proceeds without appointment of a personal representative in most summary contexts.

The key distinction from standard administration, covered in depth at court-supervised estate administration, is the absence of a full creditor claim period (typically 3 to 12 months in full probate) and the elimination or compression of inventory and accounting requirements.

Common scenarios

Small estate procedures appear most frequently in four fact patterns:

Estates containing non-probate assets — life insurance with named beneficiaries, joint tenancy property, or revocable trust assets — do not count toward the small estate threshold in most states, which frequently brings an estate within qualifying range even when total wealth appears to exceed the ceiling.

Decision boundaries

Three variables govern whether a small estate procedure is available:

  1. Gross estate value vs. threshold: Only probate assets count. Retirement accounts with designated beneficiaries, payable-on-death accounts, and jointly titled property are excluded from the calculation.
  2. Asset type eligibility: Affidavit procedures in roughly half of U.S. states are limited to personal property. Real property typically requires either a recorded affidavit of heirship, a transfer-on-death deed under states that have enacted the Uniform Real Property Transfer on Death Act, or summary administration.
  3. Creditor exposure: Summary administration does not extinguish creditor claims the way full administration can. Distributees under summary administration in Florida remain personally liable to creditors for up to the value received, per § 735.302. Affidavit recipients carry similar successor liability risk.

Where an estate has unresolved creditor claims, disputed heirship, or a will contest, small estate shortcuts become legally unavailable or risky, and the matter falls back into the standard probate pathway governed by the estate planning legal framework.

References

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