Preliminary Letters Testamentary are a temporary grant of authority that the Queens County Surrogate’s Court issues to the executor named in a will under SCPA §1412, allowing that person to begin managing and protecting the estate before the full probate process is complete. In Queens — where probate of a contested or document-heavy estate can take many months — preliminary letters bridge the gap. They let the nominated executor secure bank accounts, pay urgent bills, manage real property, and prevent assets from dissipating while the petition for full Letters Testamentary (SCPA §1414) is still pending. This guide explains who qualifies, what these letters do and do not authorize, how to obtain them in the Queens Surrogate’s Court, and what to expect on timeline and cost.
What Preliminary Letters Testamentary Are
When a person dies leaving a will, that will must be admitted to probate before the named executor receives full authority. Probate validates the will and results in Letters Testamentary under SCPA §1414. But probate is not instant. Distributees (the heirs who would inherit if there were no will) must be given jurisdiction either by signing a waiver and consent or by being served with a citation to appear. If a distributee cannot be located, contests the will, or simply delays, the estate can sit unprotected for months.
SCPA §1412 solves this problem. It authorizes the Surrogate to issue preliminary letters to the executor named in the will, giving that person interim authority to act on behalf of the estate while the probate proceeding moves forward. The legislature designed §1412 specifically so the testator’s chosen executor — not a stranger or a delay — controls the estate during the gap.
Key point: Preliminary Letters Testamentary are issued under SCPA §1412; full Letters Testamentary are issued under SCPA §1414 after the will is admitted to probate.
Who Can Apply in Queens County
Under SCPA §1412, preliminary letters are granted to the executor named in the will that has been offered for probate. The statute gives priority to the nominated executor. Where more than one executor is named, the court generally follows the order of nomination, though the named fiduciaries can agree among themselves.
To apply in Queens, you file in the Queens County Surrogate’s Court, which has jurisdiction over estates of decedents who were domiciled in Queens at death. You will typically need:
- The original will (or a petition explaining its absence)
- A petition for probate along with the application for preliminary letters
- A certified copy of the death certificate
- The names and addresses of the decedent’s distributees
- An oath and designation by the proposed preliminary executor
- A filing fee, which is graduated by the size of the estate under SCPA §2402 — confirm the exact amount with the court or your attorney, as it scales with estate value
The court may require the preliminary executor to post a bond, particularly where there are minor beneficiaries, contested issues, or substantial liquid assets. Whether bond is required and in what amount is within the Surrogate’s discretion.
What Preliminary Letters Authorize — and What They Do Not
Preliminary Letters Testamentary give broad management authority, but they are not the same as full letters. The most important limit: a preliminary executor generally cannot distribute the estate to beneficiaries or pay legacies without express court permission. The role is to preserve the estate, not to wind it up.
| Action | Permitted under Preliminary Letters? |
|---|---|
| Collect and secure estate assets | Yes |
| Open an estate bank account | Yes |
| Pay funeral expenses and ordinary debts | Yes |
| Manage and maintain real property | Yes |
| Continue or commence litigation for the estate | Generally yes |
| Sell estate real property | Only with specific court authorization |
| Distribute assets / pay legacies to beneficiaries | No — requires full letters or court order |
Because the scope is defined by the court and by SCPA §1412, always confirm the precise limits of your letters before acting. The clerk’s office issues a certificate of the letters that banks and other institutions will want to see.
How the Process Works in the Queens Surrogate’s Court
The path from filing to issuance of preliminary letters follows these steps:
- Prepare and file the probate petition together with the application for preliminary letters, the original will, and the certified death certificate at the Queens County Surrogate’s Court.
- Identify all distributees and provide their names and addresses so the court can establish jurisdiction over them for the underlying probate.
- Pay the filing fee, graduated by estate value under SCPA §2402.
- Submit the oath, designation, and any required bond for the proposed preliminary executor.
- The Surrogate reviews the application and, if satisfied, signs the order granting preliminary letters under SCPA §1412.
- Preliminary letters issue and the executor begins protecting the estate while the full probate proceeding continues toward a decree and the eventual grant of Letters Testamentary under SCPA §1414.
For a broader walkthrough of how Surrogate’s Court proceedings unfold, see our Surrogate’s Court guide and our probate overview. Once full letters issue, the responsibilities expand — review our breakdown of executor duties to understand what comes next.
When You May Not Need Preliminary Letters
Not every Queens estate requires this step. If the estate is small, SCPA Article 13 voluntary administration may be available. This is a simplified, affidavit-based procedure for collecting limited personal property without a full probate proceeding — though real property is generally excluded from voluntary administration. If the estate qualifies, you may be able to skip both probate and preliminary letters entirely. Learn more on our small estate affidavit page.
If, on the other hand, a distributee challenges the will, the estate moves into contested probate — and preliminary letters become even more valuable, since a contest can stretch the timeline considerably. See our guide to contested probate for what to expect.
Timeline and Cost
Because preliminary letters are designed to be obtained quickly, the Surrogate can issue them relatively early in the proceeding — often within weeks of a complete filing, subject to the court’s calendar. The full probate process in an uncontested Queens estate typically runs about three to six months from filing to the issuance of Letters Testamentary; a contest can extend that significantly.
Attorney fees for handling a probate (including the preliminary letters application) commonly fall in the range of $3,000 to $10,000, depending on estate complexity, whether a will contest arises, and the volume of assets. The court filing fee is separate and graduated by estate value under SCPA §2402 — we do not quote a fixed number here because it depends on your estate’s size; confirm it with the Queens County Surrogate’s Court or your counsel.
On the tax side, the New York estate tax exclusion for 2026 is $7,350,000. New York applies a “cliff”: estates exceeding 105% of the exclusion — $7,717,500 in 2026 — lose the benefit of the exclusion entirely and are taxed on the full estate. Preliminary letters give the executor the authority to begin gathering the information needed to assess any estate tax exposure early. For current figures, consult the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long do Preliminary Letters Testamentary last?
They remain in effect while the probate proceeding is pending. They are superseded once the will is admitted and full Letters Testamentary issue under SCPA §1414, or they may be revoked or limited by the court.
Can a preliminary executor distribute money to the heirs?
Generally no. Preliminary letters authorize the executor to preserve and manage the estate, not to distribute it. Distributions to beneficiaries require full letters or specific court authorization.
Do I need a lawyer to get preliminary letters in Queens?
You are not strictly required to have one, but the probate petition, jurisdictional requirements, oath, and any bond are technical, and errors cause delay. Most petitioners retain counsel, especially where a contest is possible.
What if the estate is small — do I still need this?
Maybe not. If the estate qualifies for SCPA Article 13 voluntary administration, you may avoid probate and preliminary letters altogether. Real property, however, is generally excluded from that simplified process.
Talk to a Queens Probate Attorney
Preliminary Letters Testamentary can mean the difference between an estate that stays protected and one that loses value while probate drags on. If you are the executor named in a will and need to act quickly in the Queens County Surrogate’s Court, Morgan Legal Group can prepare and file your application under SCPA §1412 and guide the estate through to full Letters Testamentary.
Schedule a consultation with Russel Morgan, Esq. to discuss your situation and protect the estate without delay.
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Further reading from Morgan Legal Group: common mistakes executors make.