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UK Law Reference
All Legal Journeys
Wills & Estates
England & Wales
8 stages
3–12 months for straightforward estates; up to 2 years for complex or disputed estates
Reviewed April 2026

Probate Application Journey

The process for applying for a Grant of Probate (with a will) or Letters of Administration (without a will), from registering the death through to administering the estate and completing final accounts.

Who Uses This Journey

Personal representatives (executors named in a will, or administrators where there is no will) who need to administer a deceased person's estate. Also relevant for beneficiaries wanting to understand the process.

Stage-by-Stage Timeline

1

Register the Death

A death must be registered at the local Register Office within 5 days of the death (in England). The registrar issues a Death Certificate. You will need several certified copies — one for each bank, insurer, and asset holder. A Burial/Cremation Certificate (green form) is also issued.

Deadline: Within 5 days of death
Fee: Death Certificate: £12.50 per copy
Common Mistakes to Avoid
  • Only ordering one death certificate — you will need multiple certified copies
  • Not informing the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) quickly — state benefits may continue being paid, causing overpayment debt
2

Locate the Will and Check Validity

Search for the original will (check with the deceased's solicitor, National Will Register, Certainty, bank's strong box). A valid will must: be in writing, signed by the testator, and witnessed by two independent witnesses who both signed in the testator's presence. Identify the named executors.

Evidence Needed
  • Original signed will (not a photocopy)
  • Any codicils (amendments to the will)
Common Mistakes to Avoid
  • Acting on a photocopy — the original will is required for probate
  • Assuming a will cannot be challenged — wills can be disputed on grounds of lack of capacity, undue influence, or invalid execution
3

Value the Estate

Compile a full inventory of the deceased's assets and liabilities as at date of death. Assets: property, bank accounts, investments, personal possessions, life insurance (paid to estate), business interests. Liabilities: mortgage, loans, credit cards, utility bills. This is needed for IHT purposes.

Evidence Needed
  • Valuations of property (RICS surveyor or estate agent)
  • Bank statements showing balances at death
  • Investment/ISA statements
  • Pension death benefit nominations (often not part of the estate)
  • Outstanding mortgage and loan balances
Common Mistakes to Avoid
  • Forgetting foreign assets — these may need separate probate in that country
  • Not claiming the nil-rate band transferable from a deceased spouse
  • Undervaluing property — HMRC checks property valuations
4

Complete IHT400 (if IHT payable)

If the estate exceeds the nil-rate band (£325,000, or up to £1 million with residence nil-rate band and transferred allowances), Inheritance Tax (IHT) at 40% is payable on the excess. Form IHT400 is the full IHT return. For estates below the threshold, a simpler IHT205 (or IHT217) suffices. IHT must be paid before probate is granted (direct payment scheme available for funds in banks).

Deadline: IHT due 6 months after end of month of death (interest accrues after this)
Fee: IHT: 40% of estate value above nil-rate band threshold
Forms at This Stage
Evidence Needed
  • Full estate valuation
  • Evidence of gifts in the last 7 years (potentially exempt transfers — PETs)
  • Details of any trusts
  • Evidence of business or agricultural property relief if claimed
Common Mistakes to Avoid
  • Missing the 6-month IHT payment deadline — interest accrues at 2.6% above Bank of England base rate
  • Not claiming all available reliefs (business property relief, agricultural relief)
  • Failing to report gifts made in the 7 years before death
5

Apply for Grant of Probate (PA1P) or Letters of Administration (PA1A)

Apply online or by post. PA1P is for estates with a will; PA1A is for estates without a will (intestacy). Swear or affirm the executor's oath. The Probate Registry checks the papers. With a will, if HMRC has confirmed IHT (or it is an exempt estate), the grant is usually issued within 4–8 weeks.

Deadline: Apply as soon as IHT is paid or estate confirmed exempt
Fee: £273 application fee for estates over £5,000 (no fee for estates of £5,000 or less)
Forms at This Stage
Evidence Needed
  • Original will (PA1P only)
  • IHT421 or IHT205 with HMRC receipt/certificate
  • Death certificate
  • Completed PA1P or PA1A
  • Executor/administrator's details
Common Mistakes to Avoid
  • Sending original will without keeping a certified copy
  • Not including the IHT receipt — HMRC must confirm IHT is settled before probate is issued
6

Grant Issued

The Probate Registry issues the sealed Grant of Probate or Letters of Administration. This is the legal authority to administer the estate. Order several sealed copies — banks and institutions require an original sealed copy each.

Fee: £1.50 per additional sealed copy
Common Mistakes to Avoid
  • Not ordering enough sealed copies — causes repeated delays with each institution
  • Distributing assets before obtaining the grant — personal liability risk
7

Administer the Estate

Collect all assets (present sealed grant to each bank, investment house, etc.), pay all debts and liabilities, deal with property (transfer or sell), pay legacies and specific bequests, and distribute the residue to beneficiaries as per the will or intestacy rules. Advertise for creditors (Trustee Act Notice in The Gazette and local newspaper) to limit personal liability.

Deadline: The 'executor's year' — administration should be substantially complete within 12 months
Evidence Needed
  • Sealed Grant of Probate or Letters of Administration
  • Asset transfer forms for each institution
  • Probate sale conveyancing documents for property
Common Mistakes to Avoid
  • Not advertising for creditors — executor can be personally liable for unknown debts
  • Distributing the estate before all debts are paid
  • Forgetting to deal with digital assets
8

Estate Accounts and Final Distribution

Prepare final estate accounts showing: all assets collected, debts paid, expenses incurred, and distributions made. Send accounts to all residuary beneficiaries for approval. Obtain receipts from beneficiaries. Keep accounts for at least 12 years (in case of later dispute).

Common Mistakes to Avoid
  • Not keeping detailed records throughout administration
  • Distributing without obtaining signed receipts from beneficiaries
  • Failing to account for income tax on any income earned by the estate during administration

Official Sources

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