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Estate planning

UK probate process — step-by-step for 2026/27

When someone dies in the UK, their estate generally can't be touched until the executor (or administrator) gets legal authority to deal with it — the "grant of probate" or "grant of letters of administration". The process takes 6-12 months on average, costs £300 in court fees plus £1.50 per extra copy, and involves an IHT400 form even if no tax is due. Here's the complete walkthrough.

Educational only. Complex estates (foreign assets, business interests, family disputes, contested wills) usually warrant solicitor involvement. Not legal advice.

What probate actually is

Probate is the legal process of:

  1. Proving the will — a court confirms the will is the valid last will of the deceased
  2. Authorising the executor — the court issues a "grant of probate" naming the executor as the legal representative
  3. Empowering the executor to act — banks, insurers, share registrars, HMRC and others will only release the deceased's assets to someone holding the grant

If there's no will, the equivalent is a "grant of letters of administration" issued to the person entitled under intestacy rules (usually the closest relative). The administrator's job is broadly the same as an executor's but they're working from intestacy rules rather than a will.

When probate is and isn't needed

Probate IS usually needed

Probate may NOT be needed

If all assets fall into "not needed" categories, probate is unnecessary — just deal directly with each institution. For most homeowner estates, this isn't the case.

The 9-step probate process

Step 1: Register the death & obtain death certificates

Within 5 days of death (or 8 days in Scotland), the death must be registered with the local register office. You'll need to take:

The register office will issue a death certificate (£12.50 each, multiple copies recommended — 8-10 typically). You'll need separate copies for banks, insurers, share registrars, HMRC, the pension provider, etc. Cheaper to buy at registration than later.

Step 2: Find the will & identify the executor

Search:

If no will is found after thorough search, the estate is treated as intestate.

Step 3: Organise the funeral

The executor (or family member, if executor not yet identified) typically arranges the funeral. Funeral costs are paid from the estate — even before probate is granted, most funeral directors will invoice the estate, and most banks will release funds specifically for funeral costs from the deceased's accounts.

Funeral costs in 2026/27: typically £4,000-£5,000 for a standard funeral; £2,000-£3,000 for a direct cremation; £7,000+ for elaborate services. Pre-paid funeral plans (Co-op, Dignity, etc.) can simplify this.

Step 4: Value the estate — the biggest step

The executor must establish the value of everything the deceased owned and owed at the date of death. This is the most time-consuming part of probate. Steps:

Allow 6-12 weeks for this step. Banks typically take 2-4 weeks to respond; share registrars can take similar.

Step 5: Complete the IHT form (IHT205 or IHT400)

HMRC requires a form for nearly every estate (except very small ones):

The IHT400 is detailed but doable for DIY executors with moderate estates. HMRC's notes (IHT400 Notes) are extensive. Allow 2-4 weeks to complete fully.

Key inheritance tax thresholds (2026/27):

Step 6: Pay any inheritance tax due

If IHT is due, the executor must pay it BEFORE the probate grant is issued. This creates a cashflow problem: the estate's assets are frozen until probate, but probate requires the tax paid first.

Three ways to handle this:

For estates with IHT due, this is often the biggest practical hurdle.

Step 7: Apply for probate

Once IHT is sorted (or confirmed not due), submit the probate application:

The probate registry checks the will, the application, and the IHT clearance. They issue the grant of probate if everything is in order.

Step 8: Collect assets & pay debts

With probate granted, the executor presents copies of the grant to each institution. The institution releases the assets to the executor's "executor account" (typically a new bank account opened for the estate).

The executor then pays:

Step 9: Distribute the estate to beneficiaries

Once debts and taxes are paid, the remaining estate is distributed per the will (or intestacy rules). Steps:

The executor's job is essentially done when distribution is complete and the estate accounts are signed off.

Typical timeline

Stage Typical duration
Death registration + funeral1-2 weeks
Find will, contact institutions, value estate2-3 months
Complete IHT forms + pay IHT1-2 months
Apply for probate, wait for grant2-6 months (probate registry currently has backlogs)
Collect assets, pay debts1-2 months
Distribute estate, close out1 month
Total typical6-12 months

Complex estates (property sales, foreign assets, contested wills, business interests) can take 18-36 months.

DIY probate vs solicitor

DIY suitable for:

DIY costs: £300 court fee + ~£15-£30 in death certificate copies + £1.50 per extra grant copy × 10-15 = ~£345 total court/admin costs.

Solicitor probate suitable for:

Solicitor probate costs: typically 1-5% of estate value in fees. For a £500k estate, that's £5,000-£25,000. Some solicitors charge fixed fees (£1,500-£3,000 for straightforward estates); banks' executor services typically charge percentage-based fees that can be very expensive (3-5% common).

Specialist probate services (Final Duties, Co-op Legal Services) charge ~£1,500-£3,000 for standard estates — cheaper than banks, more structured than appointing a high-street solicitor.

Total probate costs at a glance

Item Cost (2026/27)
Death certificate (1 copy)£12.50
Death certificate copies (recommend 10)£125
Probate court fee (estate over £5k)£300
Extra grant copies (10 @ £1.50)£15
Property valuation (if needed)£150-£500
"Statutory" notice in London Gazette + local paper (protects executor against unknown creditors)£200-£300
DIY probate total~£500-£1,250
Specialist probate service (e.g. Co-op Legal Services)£1,500-£3,000 + above costs
High-street solicitor2-3% of estate value typical
Bank executor service3-5% of estate value common

Executor duties & liabilities

Being an executor is a serious legal responsibility:

For executors with concerns: a solicitor's involvement provides indemnity and professional liability cover. For DIY executors, the statutory notices are essential.

Frequently asked questions

How long do I have to apply for probate?

There's no strict legal deadline but practical pressures exist: IHT is due 6 months after death, so probate is usually targeted within that window. Extensive delays (over 12 months) can prompt HMRC interest charges on unpaid IHT and beneficiary frustration.

Can I refuse to be an executor?

Yes. You can "renounce" probate before applying (formal renunciation form). If you've already started acting as executor, renunciation is harder — you may need to be "discharged" by the court. Most people renounce shortly after death if they don't want the responsibility.

Are there short-cut procedures for small estates?

For estates under £5,000 in cash assets and no property, probate may not be needed at all — institutions usually release small amounts on production of the death certificate and a "letter of indemnity" from family. For estates between £5k and £50k, banks have varying thresholds; check with each.

What if I find more assets after probate is granted?

If small amounts emerge, the executor can usually deal with them under the existing grant. If significant assets emerge, an "amended grant" may be needed, with potentially additional IHT.

Who pays the IHT before probate is granted?

The estate's bank can usually release funds for IHT directly to HMRC via the Direct Payment Scheme. Executor loans are an alternative. For very large IHT bills on illiquid estates (property-heavy), the 10-year instalment option for IHT on property is essential.

Can probate be contested?

Yes — will validity can be challenged (lack of capacity, undue influence, improper witnessing), beneficiary entitlement can be disputed, or claims can be made under the Inheritance (Provision for Family and Dependants) Act 1975 by people who feel inadequately provided for. Contested probate is expensive and slow; consider mediation before court.

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