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How Long Does Probate Take in Westchester County? (2026 Timeline)

In most cases, an uncontested probate in Westchester County takes about three to six months from the date you file the petition until the executor receives Letters Testamentary and can begin administering the estate. That is the headline answer — but the full picture depends on how quickly the will is located, whether all the distributees sign waivers, and whether anyone files objections. A clean estate with cooperative heirs can move through the Westchester County Surrogate’s Court comparatively fast, while a contested matter or a hard-to-find beneficiary can stretch the process well beyond a year. This 2026 guide walks through the timeline step by step so you know what to expect at each stage.

What “Probate” Actually Means in New York

Probate is the court process that proves a will is valid and grants the named executor legal authority to act. In New York, probate is governed by the Surrogate’s Court Procedure Act (SCPA) and the Estates, Powers and Trusts Law (EPTL), and every estate is heard in the Surrogate’s Court of the county where the decedent lived — for Westchester residents, that is the Westchester County Surrogate’s Court.

Once the court is satisfied the will is valid and that the people entitled to notice have received it, it issues a decree admitting the will to probate and grants Letters Testamentary under SCPA §1414. Those letters are the executor’s badge of authority — banks, brokerages, and title companies will ask to see them before releasing a single dollar. For a fuller orientation, see our Probate Overview and our Surrogate’s Court Guide.

The Westchester County Probate Timeline, Step by Step

Here is how the typical timeline unfolds. Treat these as realistic ranges, not guarantees — the Surrogate’s Court controls its own calendar and individual circumstances vary.

Stage What Happens Typical Time
1. Locate the will & gather documents Find the original signed will, order a certified death certificate, identify distributees 1–3 weeks
2. Prepare & file the petition File the Petition for Probate, original will, and certified death certificate with the Westchester County Surrogate’s Court 2–4 weeks
3. Obtain jurisdiction over distributees Collect signed waivers and consents, OR issue a citation requiring a court appearance 2 weeks – 3 months
4. Decree & Letters Testamentary If no objections are filed by the return date, the court signs the decree and issues Letters (SCPA §1414) 1–4 weeks after jurisdiction is complete
5. Administer the estate Executor collects assets, pays debts and taxes, then distributes to beneficiaries 6–18 months

Stage 1 — Locating the Will and Gathering Documents

Everything starts with the original signed will — a photocopy generally will not do. You will also need a certified death certificate. The faster these are in hand, the faster the petition can be filed.

Stage 2 — Filing the Petition for Probate

The executor (or their attorney) files a Petition for Probate together with the original will and the certified death certificate. A filing fee applies, and it is graduated based on the size of the estate under SCPA §2402 — the larger the estate, the higher the fee. We do not quote a flat number here; confirm the current amount with the court or your counsel, because it scales with estate value.

Stage 3 — Obtaining Jurisdiction Over the Distributees

This is the stage that most often dictates whether your case is fast or slow. The court must have jurisdiction over every distributee — the relatives who would inherit under New York’s intestacy rules if there were no will.

  • The fast path — waivers and consents. When all distributees sign a waiver of process and consent to probate, no citation is needed and the matter can proceed quickly.
  • The slower path — citation. If someone will not sign, cannot be located, or is a minor or under disability, the court issues a citation setting a return date. Building in time for service and the return date is what pushes many estates past the six-month mark.

Stage 4 — The Decree and Letters Testamentary

If no objections are filed by the citation’s return date, the Surrogate signs a decree admitting the will to probate and issues Letters Testamentary (SCPA §1414). The named executor is now formally empowered to act.

Need authority sooner? If probate is delayed — for example, by a will contest or a missing heir — the court can grant Preliminary Letters Testamentary under SCPA §1412, giving the nominated executor interim authority to manage and protect estate assets while the full probate is pending. This is a valuable tool when bills must be paid or property secured immediately.

Stage 5 — Administering and Closing the Estate

Receiving Letters is the start of the executor’s real work, not the finish line. The executor must marshal assets, pay valid debts, file any required tax returns, and distribute what remains. Understanding the scope of these obligations is essential — review our guide to Executor Duties before you begin. This administration phase commonly runs six to eighteen months, longer for complex estates.

What Can Make Westchester Probate Take Longer?

Several factors reliably extend the timeline:

  • Will contests. Objections to the will’s validity trigger discovery and potentially a hearing. See our Contested Probate page.
  • Missing or uncooperative distributees who force citation and service.
  • Tax exposure. For 2026, the New York estate tax exclusion is $7,350,000, with a “cliff” at 105% of the exclusion — $7,717,500 — above which the entire estate is taxed, not just the excess. Estates near that threshold demand careful, timely planning.
  • Real property, business interests, or out-of-state assets that take time to value and transfer.

Is There a Faster Alternative? Small Estates

Not every estate needs full probate. New York’s voluntary administration procedure under SCPA Article 13 lets a “voluntary administrator” settle a modest estate by affidavit, without formal probate. It is a streamlined option, but real property is generally excluded from this process. If you think the estate may qualify, see our Small Estate Affidavit guide to weigh the trade-offs.

Typical Cost in Westchester County

Attorney fees for an uncontested Westchester probate generally range from about $3,000 to $10,000, depending on the estate’s size and complexity. On top of attorney fees, expect the graduated court filing fee (SCPA §2402) scaled to estate value. A contested matter can cost considerably more.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long does uncontested probate take in Westchester County?
Most uncontested estates clear the Westchester County Surrogate’s Court in roughly three to six months, measured from filing to issuance of Letters Testamentary. Asset administration afterward typically adds several more months.

Can the executor act before probate is complete?
Sometimes. Where probate is delayed, the court may issue Preliminary Letters Testamentary under SCPA §1412, giving the nominated executor interim authority to protect estate assets while the case is pending.

Do all heirs have to agree for probate to move forward?
No, but agreement speeds things up. If every distributee signs a waiver and consent, the case proceeds quickly. If not, the court issues a citation, which adds time for service and a return date.

Does a small estate avoid probate entirely?
A modest estate may qualify for voluntary administration by affidavit under SCPA Article 13, which avoids full probate. Real property is generally excluded, so this option does not fit every situation.

Speak With a Westchester Probate Attorney

Every estate is different, and the timeline above is a guide — not a promise. The fastest route through the Westchester County Surrogate’s Court is a well-prepared petition, clean jurisdiction over the distributees, and counsel who anticipates problems before they delay you.

Russel Morgan, Esq. and the team at Morgan Legal Group guide Westchester families through probate every day. To map out your estate’s specific timeline, schedule a 30-minute consultation with Russel Morgan.

Further reading from Morgan Legal Group: when you should bring in a probate attorney.

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