When you are named executor in New York City, the path ahead can look like a maze. This Q&A breaks the Surrogate’s Court probate process into clear steps so you know what comes next and what each stage is meant to accomplish.
Step one: where do I begin?
You start in the Surrogate’s Court of the borough where the deceased lived: New York County for Manhattan, plus separate courts in Kings (Brooklyn), Queens, Bronx, and Richmond (Staten Island) counties. You file the original will, a certified death certificate, and a probate petition asking the court to admit the will and appoint you as executor under the Surrogate’s Court Procedure Act (SCPA).
Step two: how is the will proven valid?
The court checks that the will satisfies EPTL § 3-2.1, meaning it was signed by the person who made it and witnessed by two people. If the will includes a self-proving affidavit, the witnesses usually do not need to appear. Without one, the court may require witness testimony.
Step three: who has to be notified?
Before the court grants authority, all “distributees” (the relatives who would inherit if there were no will under EPTL Article 4) must receive legal notice through a document called a citation, or sign a waiver consenting to probate. This is how New York protects anyone who might object. If everyone consents, the case moves quickly; if someone files an objection, the matter can become contested.
Step four: what are “letters testamentary”?
Once the will is admitted and notice is satisfied, the court issues letters testamentary. This is the document banks, the co-op board, and brokerages in NYC will demand before they release anything. It is your proof of authority to act for the estate.
Step five: gathering and managing assets
Now you inventory and secure the estate: bank and brokerage accounts, the Manhattan condo or Brooklyn brownstone, personal property, and any business interests. You open an estate bank account, value the assets as of the date of death, and keep careful records. Assets that pass by beneficiary designation or joint ownership are generally not part of this inventory.
Step six: paying debts, expenses, and taxes
You notify known creditors, pay valid debts and final expenses, and file any required tax returns. New York estate tax can apply: the 2026 exclusion is $7,350,000, but the “cliff” at $7,717,500 means an estate just over that line is taxed in full, so accurate valuation is critical for larger NYC estates that include real property.
Step seven: distributing what remains
After debts and taxes, you distribute the remaining assets to the beneficiaries named in the will. Beneficiaries typically sign receipts and releases confirming they received their share.
Step eight: closing the estate
Finally, you account for everything you did, either through an informal accounting agreed to by the beneficiaries or a formal judicial accounting filed with the court. Once the court or the beneficiaries approve, the estate is closed and your duties end.
A note on planning ahead
Many families later wish the deceased had used a revocable trust under EPTL Article 7 to bypass several of these steps, along with a durable power of attorney under GOL § 5-1513 and a health care proxy under PHL Article 29-C for incapacity. These tools shape the workload an executor faces.
Talk to a New York attorney
Each Surrogate’s Court has its own local practices, and missteps can cost months. Before filing, consult a New York probate attorney to guide your specific estate. This article is general information, not legal advice.
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