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Small Estate Affidavit vs. Full Probate in Long Island

If you are settling a loved one’s estate on Long Island, the threshold question is whether you qualify for a small estate affidavit under SCPA Article 13 (voluntary administration) or whether you must open full probate in the County Surrogate’s Court. The short answer: if the decedent left $50,000 or less in personal property — the qualifying ceiling for voluntary administration in New York — and there is no real property requiring transfer, the small estate affidavit is usually the faster, cheaper route. If the personal property exceeds that limit, if the estate includes a home or other real property that must pass through the estate, or if the will needs to be formally validated and an executor appointed, you will need full probate and Letters Testamentary under SCPA §1414. This guide explains both paths as they work in Suffolk County (and Nassau County) so you can choose correctly the first time.

The Two Paths at a Glance

New York gives families two very different mechanisms for collecting and distributing a decedent’s assets. They are not interchangeable — the right one depends almost entirely on what the decedent owned and how it was titled.

Feature Small Estate Affidavit (SCPA Article 13) Full Probate (SCPA Article 14)
Governing law SCPA Article 13 (voluntary administration) SCPA Article 14; Letters Testamentary under §1414
Personal property limit $50,000 or less in personal property No limit
Real property (home, land) Generally excluded — cannot pass through this process Handled within the estate proceeding
Who is appointed Voluntary Administrator Executor (named in will)
Authority document Certificate of Voluntary Administration Letters Testamentary
Will required Will is filed but not formally “admitted” the same way Will is formally admitted to probate
Typical timeline A few weeks, often faster ~3–6 months uncontested
Typical attorney cost Minimal or self-filed ~$3,000–$10,000
Court filing fee Graduated by estate value (SCPA §2402) Graduated by estate value (SCPA §2402)

A critical Long Island detail: the $50,000 ceiling counts only personal property. Bank accounts, brokerage accounts, vehicles, and personal effects count toward it. A Long Island home — and given local real estate values, even a modest one — does not count and generally cannot be transferred through the small estate process. The presence of real property that needs to pass through the estate is the single most common reason a Suffolk County family that hoped to use the affidavit must instead file full probate.

When the Small Estate Affidavit Works

Voluntary administration under SCPA Article 13 is designed for modest estates where formal probate would be disproportionate. It tends to be the right fit when:

  • The decedent’s personal property is $50,000 or less (accounts, vehicles, personal items).
  • There is no real property that must be transferred through the estate.
  • The asset holders (banks, brokerages) will release funds on a Certificate of Voluntary Administration.
  • The family is in agreement and no will contest is anticipated.

The process is filed in the Surrogate’s Court of the county where the decedent lived — for Long Island residents, that is typically Suffolk County Surrogate’s Court or Nassau County Surrogate’s Court. The petitioner files a small estate affidavit with the original will (if any) and a certified death certificate. The court issues a certificate authorizing the Voluntary Administrator to collect the listed assets, pay debts, and distribute the balance. Because there is no formal appointment of an executor and no citation of distributees in the usual sense, it moves quickly — often in weeks rather than months.

For a deeper walkthrough of eligibility and the affidavit itself, see our small estate affidavit guide.

When You Need Full Probate

Full probate is required whenever the small estate process cannot reach the assets. On Long Island, the usual triggers are:

  1. Personal property exceeds $50,000.
  2. The estate includes real property (a house, condo, or land) that must pass under the will rather than by operation of law (for example, property not held jointly with right of survivorship or via a transfer-on-death mechanism).
  3. A will must be formally admitted and an executor empowered to act with third parties — title companies, the IRS, brokerage houses — that demand Letters Testamentary.
  4. A dispute is likely, such as a challenge to the will’s validity.

How Full Probate Works in Suffolk County

The probate proceeding follows a defined sequence under the SCPA:

  1. File the Petition for Probate with the original will and a certified death certificate in the County Surrogate’s Court.
  2. Obtain jurisdiction over the distributees — the people who would inherit if there were no will — either by their signed waiver and consent or by service of a citation directing them to appear.
  3. On the return date, if no one files objections, the court issues a decree admitting the will to probate.
  4. Letters Testamentary issue to the executor under SCPA §1414, granting authority to act for the estate.
  5. The executor collects assets, pays debts and taxes, and distributes the remainder to beneficiaries.

Where the executor needs authority before the will is fully admitted — for instance, to secure property or stop a financial bleed — the court may grant Preliminary Letters Testamentary under SCPA §1412, providing interim authority while the proceeding is pending. An uncontested Suffolk County probate commonly takes about three to six months, and attorney fees typically run $3,000–$10,000 depending on the estate’s size and complexity.

For the broader picture, review our probate overview and our practical Surrogate’s Court guide. If you have been named executor, our executor duties page explains your responsibilities once Letters issue.

A Note on Estate Taxes

Choosing between the two paths is about asset collection, not taxation — but Long Island families should still keep the New York estate tax in view. For 2026, the New York exclusion amount is $7,350,000. New York applies a “cliff”: once a taxable estate exceeds 105% of the exclusion ($7,717,500), the exclusion phases out and the entire estate becomes taxable, not just the excess. Most small estates fall far below these thresholds, but if real property and other holdings push an estate near them, the tax planning stakes rise sharply. Confirm exposure with counsel before assuming you are clear.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I use a small estate affidavit if my parent owned a house on Long Island?
Generally no. SCPA Article 13 voluntary administration excludes real property. If a Long Island home must pass through the estate, you will typically need full probate to transfer it.

What is the personal property limit for voluntary administration in New York?
$50,000 or less in personal property. Real property does not count toward the limit — but it also cannot be transferred through this process.

How long does full probate take in Suffolk County?
An uncontested probate commonly takes about three to six months from filing to the issuance of Letters Testamentary. A will contest under contested probate can extend that significantly.

What does it cost to file?
The Surrogate’s Court filing fee is graduated by the value of the estate under SCPA §2402 — there is no single flat number. Confirm the exact fee with the court or your attorney. Attorney fees for full probate typically range from about $3,000 to $10,000.

Talk to a Long Island Probate Attorney

Picking the wrong path costs time and money — families often start a small estate affidavit only to discover a Long Island home or an over-limit account forces them into full probate weeks later. Morgan Legal Group helps Suffolk County and Nassau County families choose correctly the first time and move efficiently through Surrogate’s Court.

Schedule a consultation with Russel Morgan, Esq. to map your fastest, lowest-cost path: Book a 30-minute consultation.

Further reading from Morgan Legal Group: ways to keep an estate out of probate.

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