When a loved one passes away in Queens leaving a Last Will and Testament, that will does not take legal effect on its own. Before an executor can pay debts, sell a co-op in Forest Hills, or distribute a two-family home in Astoria, the will must be proven valid through a court proceeding called probate. In Queens, that proceeding takes place at the Queens County Surrogate’s Court, located in Jamaica. Understanding each step in advance removes much of the anxiety families feel after a loss — and helps the estate move forward without costly missteps.
This guide walks through the probate process from start to finish under New York’s Surrogate’s Court Procedure Act (SCPA) and Estates, Powers and Trusts Law (EPTL), with the practical detail that matters specifically in Queens. For a broader introduction, see our Probate Overview; for court-specific logistics, our Surrogate’s Court Guide goes deeper.
What Probate Accomplishes
Probate is the court-supervised process of (1) confirming that a will is genuine and was properly executed, and (2) formally empowering the person named as executor to act. That authority is granted through a document called Letters Testamentary under SCPA §1414. Without Letters, banks, brokerage firms, title companies, and the Queens County Clerk will not recognize the executor’s authority to transact.
Queens is one of New York City’s most diverse and property-rich counties, which makes probate here unusually varied: estates may include rent-stabilized leasehold interests, cooperative apartment shares, multi-family homes in Jackson Heights or Flushing, and assets held abroad. Each of those features can affect how the process unfolds, which is why the orderly sequence below matters.
The Probate Process, Step by Step
Below is the typical sequence for an uncontested probate filed in the Queens County Surrogate’s Court.
| Step | What Happens | Governing Law |
|---|---|---|
| 1. File the petition | The named executor files a Petition for Probate with the original will and a certified death certificate | SCPA Article 14 |
| 2. Establish jurisdiction | All distributees (legal heirs) are brought before the court by waiver and consent or by citation | SCPA §1403 |
| 3. Court review | The Surrogate examines the will’s execution and the petition | EPTL §3-2.1 (execution requirements) |
| 4. Decree & Letters | On the return date, absent objection, a decree admits the will and Letters Testamentary issue | SCPA §1414 |
| 5. Administration | The executor marshals assets, pays debts and taxes, and distributes the estate | SCPA / EPTL |
Step 1 — File the Petition for Probate
The process begins when the person named as executor (the “petitioner”) files a Petition for Probate. Three core documents accompany it: the original signed will (not a copy), a certified death certificate, and the filing petition itself, which identifies the decedent, the heirs, and the estimated value of the estate.
The petition must be filed with the Surrogate’s Court for the county where the decedent was domiciled at death. If your loved one lived in Queens — whether in Bayside, Long Island City, Ridgewood, or Rockaway — that is the Queens County Surrogate’s Court in Jamaica. A court filing fee applies; under SCPA §2402 that fee is graduated according to the size of the estate. We do not quote a flat figure here because it changes with estate value — confirm the current amount with the court or your attorney.
Step 2 — Bring the Distributees Before the Court
New York requires that everyone who would inherit if there were no will — the distributees, or legal next of kin — receive notice and an opportunity to object. There are two ways to satisfy this:
- Waiver and Consent. If the distributees agree, each signs a document waiving the formal citation and consenting to probate. This is the fastest path.
- Citation. If a distributee will not sign, cannot be located, or is a minor or otherwise under disability, the court issues a citation — a formal summons directing the person to appear on a stated return date. Service can be the most time-consuming part of a Queens probate when heirs live out of state or abroad, a common situation given the borough’s international communities.
Step 3 — The Court Reviews the Will
The Surrogate’s Court examines whether the will meets New York’s execution formalities under EPTL §3-2.1: signed by the testator at the end, in the presence of at least two witnesses, who also signed within thirty days of one another. If the will contains a self-proving affidavit, the witnesses generally need not appear in person, which streamlines matters considerably.
Step 4 — The Decree and Letters Testamentary
If no one files objections by the return date, the Surrogate signs a decree granting probate and issues Letters Testamentary under SCPA §1414. These Letters are the executor’s badge of authority. Armed with certified copies, the executor can open an estate bank account, access the decedent’s accounts, and deal with real property.
When the executor needs authority before probate is complete — for example, to secure a vacant home in Hollis or to stop a foreclosure clock — the court can issue Preliminary Letters Testamentary under SCPA §1412. These grant interim power to manage and protect estate assets while the full probate petition is pending.
Step 5 — Administer and Distribute the Estate
Once Letters issue, the executor’s substantive work begins: marshaling assets, notifying creditors, filing the decedent’s final income tax returns, paying valid debts, and ultimately distributing what remains to the beneficiaries named in the will. Our Executor Duties page details these fiduciary responsibilities, including the personal liability an executor can face for getting them wrong.
How Long Does Probate Take in Queens?
For a straightforward, uncontested estate where all distributees sign waivers and the will is self-proving, probate in Queens County typically takes about three to six months from filing to the issuance of Letters and the bulk of administration. Several factors push that longer:
- A distributee who must be served by citation rather than signing a waiver
- Missing or hard-to-locate heirs, requiring a diligent search
- Real property that must be sold before distribution
- Estate tax filings (see below)
- Objections to the will, which convert the matter into contested probate — a litigation track that can run a year or more
What Does Probate Cost?
Two separate costs are involved, and it helps to keep them distinct:
- Court filing fee — set by statute under SCPA §2402 and graduated by the value of the estate. We intentionally do not state a dollar amount; verify the current fee with the Queens County Surrogate’s Court.
- Attorney’s fee — for a routine, uncontested Queens probate, legal fees commonly range from roughly $3,000 to $10,000, depending on the estate’s complexity, the number of heirs, and whether real property or tax filings are involved. Contested matters cost more.
When You May Be Able to Avoid Full Probate
Not every estate requires the full process. New York provides a simplified path for smaller estates.
If the decedent’s personal property is modest in value, the estate may qualify for voluntary administration — often called a small estate proceeding — under SCPA Article 13. Instead of a full petition, a voluntary administrator files an affidavit. Importantly, real property is generally excluded from this simplified procedure, which limits its usefulness in Queens, where so much family wealth is tied up in homes and co-ops. Our Small Estate Affidavit page explains who qualifies.
A Word on Estate Taxes
Most Queens estates owe no New York estate tax, but the thresholds matter. For 2026, the New York estate tax exclusion amount is $7,350,000. New York also imposes a “cliff“: once a taxable estate exceeds 105% of the exclusion — $7,717,500 in 2026 — the exclusion is lost entirely and the whole estate becomes taxable, not just the excess. Estates approaching that range need careful planning and timely filings, because the cliff can produce a startlingly large tax bill on relatively small amounts of value over the line.
Why Queens Probate Deserves Local Attention
Queens estates frequently involve features that complicate an otherwise routine probate: cooperative apartment shares that require board cooperation on transfer, multi-family investment properties, and heirs spread across the globe. Handling these correctly — and avoiding the delays that come from improper service or incomplete petitions — is where experienced counsel earns its keep. Morgan Legal Group, led by attorney Russel Morgan, Esq., guides Queens families through every step described above.
Schedule a consultation with Russel Morgan, Esq. →
Frequently Asked Questions
Where do I file for probate if my relative lived in Queens?
You file in the Queens County Surrogate’s Court in Jamaica, the court with jurisdiction over estates of people who were domiciled in Queens at the time of death. You submit the Petition for Probate together with the original will and a certified death certificate.
How long does probate take in Queens County?
An uncontested probate where all heirs sign waivers and the will is self-proving generally takes three to six months. Service by citation, hard-to-find heirs, real estate sales, estate tax filings, or objections can extend the timeline well beyond that.
Can an executor act before probate is finished?
Yes. The court can issue Preliminary Letters Testamentary under SCPA §1412, giving the named executor interim authority to protect and manage estate assets while the full probate petition is still pending.
Do small estates have to go through full probate in New York?
Not necessarily. Estates with modest personal property may use voluntary administration under SCPA Article 13, which uses an affidavit instead of a full petition. However, real property is generally excluded, so many Queens estates that include a home still require regular probate.
How much does probate cost in Queens?
There are two costs: a statutory court filing fee that is graduated by estate value under SCPA §2402 (confirm the current amount with the court), and attorney’s fees, which for an uncontested Queens probate commonly run about $3,000 to $10,000 depending on complexity.
This page is general legal information about probate in Queens County, New York, not legal advice for your specific situation. Consult a qualified New York attorney. For authoritative court information, visit the New York State Unified Court System, and for estate tax details, the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance. Statutes are published at the New York State Senate.
Further reading from Morgan Legal Group: ways to keep an estate out of probate.