To probate a will in Brooklyn, you file a Petition for Probate and Letters Testamentary — together with the original will and a certified death certificate — in the Kings County Surrogate’s Court, the court with jurisdiction over estates of people who lived in Brooklyn. The court validates the will, confirms the named executor, and issues Letters Testamentary, the document that gives the executor legal authority to act. For a straightforward, uncontested estate, that authority typically takes about three to six months to obtain. This guide takes the “advanced” view: not just the steps, but the decision points where Brooklyn executors most often lose time and money — and how to move through Surrogate’s Court deliberately rather than reactively.
Morgan Legal Group, led by attorney Russel Morgan, Esq., prepares and prosecutes probate petitions in Kings County and across New York. The practical orientation below is built for executors, beneficiaries, and families trying to understand what actually happens after a death in Brooklyn.
Why Kings County Is Its Own Animal
New York probate is governed statewide by the Surrogate’s Court Procedure Act (SCPA) and the Estates, Powers and Trusts Law (EPTL). But probate is heard in the county Surrogate’s Court where the decedent was domiciled. If your loved one lived in Brooklyn, the matter belongs in Kings County — not Manhattan, not Queens, not Nassau. Domicile, not where the death certificate was issued or where a hospital sits, controls venue.
Kings County is one of the busiest Surrogate’s Courts in the state. That volume has two consequences an “advanced” executor should plan around:
- Return dates and decree timing run on the court’s calendar, not yours. A clean file still moves at the pace of the docket. Filing early and complete is the single biggest lever you control.
- Clerk review is exacting. A missing certified death certificate, an unsigned waiver, or an heir who cannot be located will bounce a petition back. Each round-trip can add weeks.
The court is part of the New York State Unified Court System. You should confirm current filing logistics, forms, and any e-filing requirements directly through the official portal at nycourts.gov or with counsel before you file. We do not publish the court’s street address, specific filing-fee dollar amounts, or clerk-desk details here because those change — verify them at the source.
The Five Steps to Letters Testamentary
The probate sequence is statutory and predictable. The art is in execution.
- File the Petition for Probate / Letters Testamentary with the original will and a certified death certificate in Kings County Surrogate’s Court. The petition names the proposed executor, the heirs and beneficiaries, and the approximate estate value.
- Obtain jurisdiction over interested persons. Every distributee (the people who would inherit if there were no will) and every named beneficiary must either sign a Waiver and Consent or be served with a citation ordering them to appear. Jurisdiction is the step that most often stalls Brooklyn estates — particularly when an heir is estranged, abroad, or unknown.
- The return date arrives. If no one files objections, the Surrogate is positioned to admit the will to probate.
- The Surrogate signs the decree granting probate.
- Letters Testamentary issue under SCPA §1414. With Letters in hand, the executor can collect assets, pay debts and taxes, and distribute to beneficiaries.
When You Need Authority Before the Decree
Sometimes the estate cannot wait months for the full decree — a property tax bill is due, a business needs a signatory, or assets are at risk. Preliminary Letters Testamentary under SCPA §1412 let the court appoint the nominated executor on an interim basis, granting limited authority while the formal probate proceeds. For Brooklyn estates with time-sensitive real estate or accounts, preliminary letters are an underused tool. An experienced probate attorney will flag at intake whether your facts justify requesting them in the initial petition rather than scrambling later.
Probate Timeline at a Glance
| Stage | What Happens | Typical Window* |
|---|---|---|
| Preparation & filing | Gather will, death certificate, heir information; draft and file petition | 2–4 weeks |
| Jurisdiction | Collect signed waivers or serve citations on all interested persons | 2–8+ weeks |
| Return date & decree | Court reviews; absent objections, Surrogate signs decree | Varies by docket |
| Letters issue | Executor receives Letters Testamentary (SCPA §1414) | Days after decree |
| Administration | Collect assets, pay debts/taxes, distribute, account | Several months+ |
*Approximate, for a straightforward uncontested estate. Contested matters, missing heirs, or will challenges extend the timeline significantly. A typical clean probate to Letters runs roughly 3–6 months.
What Probate Costs in Kings County
Two cost categories matter, and they are different things:
- Court filing fee. New York sets the Surrogate’s Court filing fee on a graduated scale tied to estate value under SCPA §2402 — larger estates pay more. We do not quote a specific dollar figure here because the schedule is updated periodically; confirm the current amount with the court or your attorney before filing.
- Legal fees to obtain Letters. For a straightforward estate, the cost to prepare and prosecute the petition through to Letters Testamentary commonly runs about $3,000 to $10,000, depending on complexity — the number of heirs, whether citations must be served, whether real property is involved, and whether objections arise.
Building a realistic budget early prevents the most common executor mistake: treating probate as a one-time form fee when it is a multi-stage legal proceeding.
The Small-Estate Shortcut: Voluntary Administration
Not every Brooklyn estate needs full probate. SCPA Article 13 voluntary administration is a streamlined affidavit procedure for small estates that fall under the statutory limit for personal property. Instead of a full petition, decree, and Letters Testamentary, a “voluntary administrator” is appointed through a far simpler filing.
Voluntary administration is powerful but narrow:
- It applies only to personal property under the statutory small-estate threshold — real estate generally takes it off the table for this procedure.
- It is faster and cheaper than full probate when the facts qualify.
- The dollar limit is set by statute and adjusted over time; confirm the current small-estate limit before relying on it.
If your loved one owned a Brooklyn home or a co-op, you are usually outside Article 13 and back into full probate. An attorney can tell you in one conversation which track fits.
Advanced Pitfalls Brooklyn Executors Should Anticipate
- Lost original will. The court strongly prefers the original, signed will. A photocopy triggers a heavier evidentiary burden. Locate the original before anything else.
- Unlocatable distributees. If a distributee cannot be found, the court may require diligent-search proof or a guardian ad litem — both add time. Start the search at intake, not at the return date.
- Co-op and condo timing. Boards and transfer agents often demand Letters before releasing or transferring shares. This is precisely where preliminary letters (SCPA §1412) earn their keep.
- Tax coordination. Federal and New York estate-tax exposure and the decedent’s final income taxes run parallel to probate. Verify current New York thresholds at tax.ny.gov and coordinate filings so distributions aren’t clawed back.
Frequently Asked Questions
Which court handles probate for a Brooklyn resident?
The Kings County Surrogate’s Court. New York probate is venued in the county where the decedent was domiciled, and Brooklyn is Kings County. Confirm current filing procedures at nycourts.gov.
How long does probate take in Kings County?
A straightforward, uncontested estate typically takes about three to six months to obtain Letters Testamentary. Disputes, missing heirs, or will contests can extend it well beyond that.
What is the difference between Letters Testamentary and Preliminary Letters?
Letters Testamentary (SCPA §1414) issue after the Surrogate’s decree and give the executor full authority. Preliminary Letters Testamentary (SCPA §1412) grant interim authority earlier, before the decree, so urgent estate matters can be handled.
How much does it cost to probate a will in Brooklyn?
The court filing fee is graduated by estate value under SCPA §2402 — confirm the current amount with the court. Legal fees to obtain Letters for a straightforward estate commonly run about $3,000 to $10,000.
Can a small estate avoid full probate?
Yes. SCPA Article 13 voluntary administration offers an affidavit-based shortcut for small estates of personal property under the statutory limit. Real estate generally disqualifies the estate from this procedure.
Talk to a Brooklyn Probate Attorney
Probate in Kings County rewards preparation: a complete petition, secured jurisdiction over every heir, and the right tools — including preliminary letters — chosen at the start. Morgan Legal Group and attorney Russel Morgan, Esq. guide Brooklyn executors and families through each step of the Surrogate’s Court process, from the initial filing to final distribution.
Schedule a free 30-minute consultation to map your specific estate and timeline: https://calendly.com/russel-morgan/30min.
Further reading from Morgan Legal Group: ways to keep an estate out of probate.