✓ Verified June 2026
This guide explains the Wisconsin probate process in plain English — which court handles it, how long it takes, what it costs, and how families can sometimes skip it. All figures are from Wisconsin law, verified as of June 2026.
In This Wisconsin Guide:
Wisconsin Probate at a Glance
Here are the key facts about the Wisconsin probate process:
| Court that handles probate | Circuit Court (Probate Division) — each county has a Register in Probate who handles filings and procedural guidance under the circuit court judge |
| Probate types available | Informal administration (minimal court supervision, overseen by Probate Registrar, no attorney required), Formal administration (judge-supervised, attorney required, minimum 2 hearings), Summary settlement (shortened process for estates valued at 50000 or less with a surviving spouse or minor children), Transfer by affidavit (no court proceeding, for solely owned probate assets valued at 50000 or less under Wis. Stat. 867.03) |
| Typical timeline | 9 to 12 months for informal administration of an uncontested estate; Wisconsin law requires estates to close within 18 months unless the court grants an extension |
| Fastest option | Transfer by affidavit under Wis. Stat. 867.03 for solely owned probate assets valued at 50000 or less — no court proceeding required, may be completed in a few weeks once the affidavit is signed, notarized, and filed; Summary settlement for estates up to 50000 with a surviving spouse or minor children typically takes 2 to 4 months |
| Fee structure | HYBRID — executor/personal representative compensation is STATUTORY at 2 percent of inventory value under Wis. Stat. 857.05; attorney fees are REASONABLE (not set by statute) and must be approved by the court under Wis. Stat. 851.40; court filing fees are set by statute at 0.2 percent of net estate value (for estates over 10000) under Wis. Stat. 814.66 |
| Typical total cost | For a 500000 estate, approximate total costs include a 1000 filing fee (0.2 percent), 10000 personal representative commission (2 percent), and 5000 to 7000 in attorney fees, totaling roughly 3 to 4 percent of the estate; smaller estates pay proportionally less |
| Court filing fee | 20 flat fee if the net value of property subject to administration is 10000 or less; 0.2 percent of the net value of property subject to administration (less encumbrances, liens, and charges) if over 10000 — per Wis. Stat. 814.66; additional fees include 20 for filing objections to a will, 10 for safekeeping a will, and 3 per certificate |
| Executor compensation | STATUTORY — 2 percent of the inventory value of estate property (less mortgages and liens, plus net principal gains) under Wis. Stat. 857.05; the court may allow additional compensation for unusual difficulty or extraordinary services; the decedent and personal representative (or majority-interest beneficiaries) may agree in writing to a different rate; compensation may be reduced or denied if the personal representative is derelict in duty |
How to Avoid Probate in Wisconsin
Transfer by affidavit for solely owned probate assets valued at 50000 or less (Wis. Stat. 867.03); Transfer on death (TOD) deeds for real estate under Wis. Stat. 705.15; revocable living trusts; joint tenancy with right of survivorship; payable-on-death and transfer-on-death designations on bank accounts, securities, and retirement accounts; beneficiary designations on life insurance and retirement plans; marital property agreements under Wisconsin’s marital property law (community property state)
Out-of-state property (ancillary probate): Yes — Wisconsin requires ancillary probate for real property located in another state, and other states require ancillary probate for real property located in Wisconsin owned by an out-of-state decedent; real property is governed by the laws of the state where it is physically located; ancillary probate may be avoided by holding out-of-state property in a revocable living trust, as joint tenants with right of survivorship,
as tenants by the entirety, or via a TOD deed if available in that state
Other Wisconsin probate rules: Wisconsin is a community property (marital property) state — all property acquired during marriage is presumed to be marital property, which significantly affects probate distribution; Wisconsin adopted the Uniform Marital Property Act; creditors generally have 3 to 4 months to file claims against the estate (the court sets the exact deadline in the notice to creditors);
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Wisconsin requires publication of notice to creditors in a local newspaper; if the personal representative also serves as the estate’s attorney (or is in the same law firm), the court may allow either executor commissions or attorney fees — it may allow both only if the will specifically authorizes dual compensation under Wis.
Stat. 857.05; Wisconsin offers a self-help probate guide at https://www.wicourts.gov/services/public/selfhelp/docs/probateguide.pdf; mandatory e-filing for attorneys in probate cases
Understanding the Wisconsin Probate Process
The Wisconsin probate process follows a clear sequence — open the case, appoint the executor, inventory assets, pay debts, then distribute what is left. How long the Wisconsin probate process takes and what it costs depends on the type of probate the estate qualifies for, which is why the exact figures above matter.
Many families are relieved to learn the Wisconsin probate process is simpler and cheaper than they feared, especially for smaller or well-planned estates. Your state probate court’s self-help center can guide an executor through the Wisconsin probate process step by step.
You don’t have to do this alone
If you are settling a loved one’s estate in Wisconsin, your state’s probate court self-help center and free legal-aid offices can walk you through the process at no cost. For an active probate or a deadline, talk to a licensed probate attorney in your state.
Official Wisconsin Sources & Resources
- Wisconsin Probate Court: https://www.wicourts.gov/forms1/circuit/formcategory.jsp?Category=26
- Wisconsin Probate Code: https://docs.legis.wisconsin.gov/statutes/statutes/856
- Internal Revenue Service — Estate Tax: irs.gov
- Cornell Legal Information Institute: law.cornell.edu/wex
This Wisconsin probate guide was last verified against official sources in June 2026. Laws change — verify with your state court or a licensed attorney.
More Wisconsin Wills & Probate Guides
- Wisconsin Wills & Estate Planning
- Dying Without a Will in Wisconsin
- Wisconsin Estate & Inheritance Tax
- Wisconsin Small Estate Affidavit
- Wisconsin Living Trust
- Probate Cost Calculator
- All 51 States
Disclaimer: This guide is informational only and is not legal or tax advice. Estate, probate, and tax laws change and vary by state and county. Verify current rules and dollar figures with your state’s court, statute, or a licensed attorney or tax professional before acting. For urgent matters like an active probate or a tax deadline, consult a licensed professional in your state right away.