Probate Delays in NYC and How to Avoid Them

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Probate in a New York City Surrogate’s Court can move efficiently or drag on for over a year, and the difference often comes down to avoidable mistakes. Manhattan, Brooklyn, and Queens courts each carry heavy caseloads, so a single missing document can push your matter back weeks. This checklist covers the delays families hit most and how to sidestep them.

Mistake 1: Hunting for the Original Will

New York requires the original signed will to begin probate under EPTL 3-2.1. Families often have only a copy, which triggers a more complex lost-will proceeding. Locate the original early, ideally before death, and store it where the executor can reach it.

Mistake 2: Incomplete or Incorrect Petitions

The most common source of delay is a petition with missing distributee information, wrong addresses, or an inaccurate asset estimate. The Surrogate’s Court clerk returns these for correction, costing weeks each cycle. Build a complete family tree and verified addresses before filing.

Mistake 3: Failing to Notify the Right People

Every distributee, the people who would inherit under intestacy in EPTL Article 4, must be properly served with citation. Missing or hard-to-locate heirs, common in large NYC families, can stall the appointment of an executor. Identify and locate them at the outset.

Mistake 4: Distributing Too Early

Executors eager to help beneficiaries sometimes pay out before the seven-month creditor period runs from the issuance of letters. If a valid claim or tax bill later appears, the executor can be personally liable. Hold distributions until debts, taxes, and the claim window are addressed.

Mistake 5: Missing Estate Tax Steps

Overlooking a required New York estate tax return creates penalties and delays. For 2026 the New York exclusion is $7,350,000 with a cliff at $7,717,500, above which the whole estate is taxed. Calculate the gross estate early so you know whether a return is due before you try to close.

Mistake 6: Will Contests and Family Conflict

A capacity or undue-influence objection can add many months. Clear attorney-supervised execution, contemporaneous notes, and proactive communication with heirs reduce the odds of a contest in the first place.

Mistake 7: Overlooking Incapacity Planning

Delays sometimes start before death. Without a durable power of attorney under GOL 5-1513 and a health care proxy under PHL Article 29-C, families may need a guardianship proceeding, complicating the estate that follows. Good lifetime planning smooths the eventual probate.

Your Anti-Delay Checklist

  1. Secure the original will.
  2. Build a complete, verified distributee list.
  3. File a clean, accurate petition.
  4. Serve all interested parties promptly.
  5. Calculate the estate tax exposure early.
  6. Hold distributions until the creditor period closes.

A Note for New York Families

Most probate delays in New York are preventable with preparation. Given the volume in NYC Surrogate’s Courts, a New York attorney can help you file cleanly and avoid the missteps that stall estates. This article is general information, not legal advice for your situation.

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DISCLAIMER: The information provided in this blog is for informational purposes only and should not be considered legal advice. The content of this blog may not reflect the most current legal developments. No attorney-client relationship is formed by reading this blog or contacting Morgan Legal Group PLLP.

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