Small Estates by State (2026)

Small estates by state rules let families skip the long, costly probate process when an estate is modest in value. Every state offers some kind of shortcut — usually a small-estate affidavit or a simplified “summary” probate — but the dollar limit, the waiting period, and the exact form change from state to state. This plain-English guide compares small estates by state for all 50 states, with a link to each state’s full small-estate guide.

Small estates by state guide — small-estate affidavit and simplified probate

Click any state below to read its full small-estate guide, with the exact dollar limit, affidavit form, and step-by-step process for that state.

Quick Facts — Small Estates by State (2026)

  • All 50 states offer at least one small-estate shortcut to avoid full, formal probate
  • The most common tool is the small-estate affidavit — a sworn form that lets an heir collect assets without a full court case
  • Most states also offer summary or simplified probate, a streamlined court process for modestly sized estates
  • The typical waiting period before filing an affidavit is 30 to 45 days after death; a few states require no fixed wait
  • Dollar limits vary enormously — from a few thousand dollars to well over $180,000 — so your state’s exact threshold is what matters
  • Many states exclude the home, or count only certain assets, toward the small-estate limit, which can make more estates qualify than you would expect

Small Estates by State — All 50 States Compared

The table below shows the core of small estates by state for all 50 states. Here is what each column means:

Small-Estate Affidavit = whether the state lets an heir collect assets with a sworn affidavit instead of opening a full probate case.

Summary Probate = whether the state offers a simplified, faster court process for smaller estates, as an alternative to the affidavit.

Typical Wait = how long you generally must wait after the death before using the affidavit. The exact period and the dollar limit are in your state guide.

StateSmall-Estate AffidavitSummary ProbateTypical Wait
AlabamaYesYes30 days
AlaskaYesYes30 days
ArizonaYesYes30 days (personal); 6 months (real estate)
ArkansasYesYes45 days
CaliforniaYesYes40 days
ColoradoYesYes10 days
ConnecticutYesYes30 days
DelawareYesYes30 days
FloridaYesYesNo fixed wait (summary administration)
GeorgiaYesYesVaries by county
HawaiiYesYes30 days
IdahoYesYes30 days
IllinoisYesYes30 days
IndianaYesYes45 days
IowaYesYes40 days
KansasYesYesVaries
KentuckyYesYesNo fixed wait
LouisianaYesYesVaries
MaineYesYes30 days
MarylandYesYesVaries
MassachusettsYesYes30 days
MichiganYesYes28 days
MinnesotaYesYes30 days
MississippiYesYes30 days
MissouriYesYes30 days
MontanaYesYes30 days
NebraskaYesYes30 days
NevadaYesYes40 days
New HampshireYesYesVaries
New JerseyYesYesNo fixed wait
New MexicoYesYes30 days
New YorkYesYesNo fixed wait (voluntary administration)
North CarolinaYesYes30 days
North DakotaYesYes30 days
OhioYesYesVaries
OklahomaYesYes10 days
OregonYesYes30 days
PennsylvaniaYesYesNo fixed wait
Rhode IslandYesYes30 days
South CarolinaYesYes30 days
South DakotaYesYes30 days
TennesseeYesYes45 days
TexasYesYes30 days
UtahYesYes30 days
VermontYesYesVaries
VirginiaYesYes60 days
WashingtonYesYes40 days
West VirginiaYesYesVaries
WisconsinYesYesNo fixed wait
WyomingYesYes30 days

Waiting periods reflect the typical rule for the small-estate affidavit; some states vary by county or by the type of asset. The dollar limit that determines whether an estate qualifies differs in every state. Always confirm the current threshold and form in your state guide below.

Small Estates by State — What Counts as a Small Estate

The foundation of small estates by state is the dollar limit — the value below which an estate qualifies for a simplified process instead of full probate. This threshold is set by each state and varies dramatically, from just a few thousand dollars in some states to well over a hundred thousand in others. If the estate is worth less than the limit, the family can usually avoid months of court supervision.

What counts toward that limit is just as important as the number itself. Many states leave out assets that already pass outside probate — like life insurance, retirement accounts, jointly owned property, and assets in a living trust. Some also exclude the family home or a vehicle. Because of these exclusions, an estate that looks too large at first glance may still qualify. Your state guide spells out the exact limit and what is counted.

Small Estates by State — The Small-Estate Affidavit

The most popular shortcut in small estates by state law is the small-estate affidavit. Instead of opening a court case, an heir fills out a sworn form stating that the estate is under the limit and that they are entitled to the assets. They present the affidavit to a bank, the DMV, or whoever holds the property, and the asset is released to them — often within days rather than months.

Most states require a short waiting period after the death, commonly 30 to 45 days, before the affidavit can be used. The form must usually be signed under oath and sometimes notarized, and lying on it carries real penalties. The affidavit is ideal for estates that are mostly bank accounts, a car, or a final paycheck. For the precise form and waiting period where you live, see your state guide.

Small Estates by State — Summary and Simplified Probate

When an estate is a little too large or complex for an affidavit, many states offer a middle option under small estates by state rules: summary or simplified probate. This is a real court process, but a streamlined one — with fewer hearings, less paperwork, and a faster timeline than formal probate. It is often the right path when there is real estate to transfer or a will to validate, but the estate is still modest.

Summary probate usually has its own dollar limit, separate from the affidavit limit, and its own set of forms. Some states let a surviving spouse use an especially simple version. Because the rules and the cutoff differ from the affidavit process, it is worth checking both options for your state — your state guide explains which one fits your situation and how to file.

Small Estates by State — When You Still Need Full Probate

Even with these shortcuts, some estates must go through full probate. Under small estates by state rules, an estate that exceeds the dollar limit, includes contested assets, or involves a will that someone is challenging generally cannot use the simplified path. Significant debts, a business, or property in several states can also push an estate into formal probate.

If full probate is unavoidable, knowing the process in advance saves time and stress. Our companion guide on probate by state walks through the full court process, the typical timeline, and the costs in each state. And the best way to spare your own family probate entirely is planning ahead — see trusts by state for how a living trust keeps assets out of probate completely.

Find Your State Small-Estate Guide

Ready to look up small estates by state for your specific state? Click any state name in the table above for its complete guide, or browse the full collection below.

Browse All 50 State Small-Estate Guides →

Official Sources

  • Cornell Legal Information Institute: law.cornell.edu/wex — plain-English definitions of probate and small-estate terms
  • Uniform Law Commission: uniformlaws.org — the model probate code many states follow for small estates
  • State probate courts & statutes: each state’s small-estate statute and court self-help portal, linked inside the individual state guides
  • Legal Services Corporation: lsc.gov — find free local legal aid for small-estate questions

Small estates by state data compiled from official state probate codes, state court self-help portals, and established legal-reference sources. Dollar limits, waiting periods, and affidavit forms change as legislatures amend the law. Click any state above for its verified guide with current figures. Last reviewed June 2026.

Informational only — not legal or tax advice. This page is for general informational purposes only and does not create an attorney-client relationship. Probate and small-estate laws vary by state and change over time. For advice about your specific situation, consult a licensed attorney or your local probate court’s self-help center.