What happens after death — with or without a will. NC and SC probate administration explained, with the statutory framework, real timelines, real costs, and the planning tools that avoid probate entirely.
Under N.C.G.S. Chapter 28A in North Carolina and S.C. Code Title 62, Article 3 in South Carolina, probate is the court-supervised process of administering a deceased person’s estate — validating the will if one exists, appointing a personal representative or executor, marshaling and valuing assets, paying creditors and taxes, and distributing the remaining property to heirs or beneficiaries. In NC the Clerk of Superior Court sits as the probate judge (N.C.G.S. § 28A-2-1); in SC a dedicated county Probate Court has exclusive jurisdiction (S.C. Code § 62-1-302). A routine NC estate closes in roughly 6–12 months with a 90-day creditor-notice period (N.C.G.S. § 28A-14-1); a routine SC estate takes 8–12 months with an eight-month creditor period (S.C. Code § 62-3-801). Whether you die testate or intestate, the same court process applies; only the distribution rules differ.
In North Carolina, probate is administered by the Clerk of Superior Court in the decedent’s county of residence (N.C.G.S. § 28A-3-1). The Clerk acts as an ex officio judge of probate — supervising the appointment of executors, reviewing inventories and accountings, and resolving routine disputes without requiring formal court hearings. In South Carolina, probate is administered by the county Probate Court (S.C. Code § 62-1-303), which can proceed either informally through the clerk or formally with judicial oversight, depending on the complexity of the estate.
Probate exists for a reason: it provides a structured, public process for paying the decedent’s debts, resolving disputes among heirs, and giving legal title to property recipients. But it is also slow, public, and expensive. A typical NC probate runs 10–20 months and consumes 3–7% of the gross estate value in court fees, executor compensation, and attorney fees. A typical SC probate runs 9–15 months with similar costs. Most of the planning Ryan does is built around either streamlining probate (with a well-drafted will) or avoiding it entirely (with a properly funded revocable living trust).
North Carolina probate is administered by the Clerk of Superior Court in the decedent’s county of residence. Below are the steps required for a standard testate estate — with the statutory citations and typical timing for each.
The original will must be filed with the Clerk of Superior Court of the decedent’s county within 60 days of death under N.C.G.S. § 28A-2A-1. The executor (or, if no executor is named or able, the proposed administrator) files an Application for Probate and Letters Testamentary along with the will, a death certificate, and a preliminary inventory. The Clerk reviews the documents, verifies the will’s validity, and issues Letters Testamentary — the official document authorizing the executor to act on behalf of the estate.
The executor must publish notice to creditors once a week for four consecutive weeks in a newspaper of general circulation in the county (N.C.G.S. § 28A-14-1). Known creditors must receive direct written notice. Creditors then have 3 months from the first publication date to file claims against the estate. Claims filed after the 3-month period are generally barred. This 3-month window drives most of the NC probate timeline — the estate cannot close until it expires.
Within 3 months of qualifying, the executor must file a verified inventory with the Clerk listing all probate assets at their date-of-death fair market value (N.C.G.S. § 28A-20-1). Real estate appraisals, account statements, vehicle valuations, and personal property estimates all go into the inventory. Assets that pass outside probate (trust property, retirement accounts with beneficiaries, joint accounts) are excluded.
After the creditor period expires and claims are reviewed, the executor pays valid claims in statutory priority order: administrative expenses, funeral and last illness, federal and state taxes, secured claims, then unsecured claims (N.C.G.S. § 28A-19-6). The executor also files the decedent’s final income tax return (federal Form 1040 and NC Form D-400) and, if estate income exceeds $600, an estate income tax return (Form 1041 and NC Form D-407). Federal estate tax (Form 706) is required only for estates exceeding the federal exemption ($13.99 million in 2025).
The executor files an annual account with the Clerk for each year the estate remains open (N.C.G.S. § 28A-21-1) and a final account before distribution. The final account itemizes all receipts, disbursements, fees, and the proposed distribution to beneficiaries. Beneficiaries receive notice and may file objections; the Clerk reviews and approves the account.
After Clerk approval of the final account, the executor distributes remaining assets to beneficiaries per the will (or per intestate succession if no will). Beneficiaries sign receipts; the executor files those receipts with the Clerk; the estate is formally closed by the Clerk. Total typical NC probate runs 10–20 months from filing to closure.
South Carolina probate is administered by the county Probate Court — a distinct court system from NC’s Clerk of Superior Court structure. SC offers two procedural tracks — informal and formal — selected at filing based on the estate’s complexity.
Within 30 days of receiving the will, the person holding it must deliver it to the Probate Court in the decedent’s county of residence (S.C. Code § 62-2-901). A formal or informal application for appointment is then filed. The court issues Letters Testamentary (with a will) or Letters of Administration (without one), authorizing the personal representative to act.
South Carolina’s split-track system is unique and important:
The personal representative must publish notice to creditors once a week for three consecutive weeks (S.C. Code § 62-3-801) and send direct notice to known creditors. Creditors have 8 months from the first publication to file claims — significantly longer than NC’s 3-month window. This 8-month period is the primary driver of SC probate timing.
The personal representative must file an inventory with the Probate Court within 90 days of appointment (S.C. Code § 62-3-706), listing all probate assets at fair market value. Appraisals are required for assets where fair value is not readily apparent — real estate, business interests, collectibles.
After the 8-month creditor period and claim review, the personal representative pays valid claims in statutory priority (S.C. Code § 62-3-805): administrative expenses, family allowance, funeral and burial, federal/state taxes, secured claims, judgments, then general unsecured claims. The final federal Form 1040, SC Form 1040, and (if required) federal estate tax return and estate income tax returns are filed.
The personal representative files a final accounting (or, in informal cases, a closing statement) with the Probate Court. Beneficiaries receive notice and may object. Once the court approves, distributions are made, receipts are filed, and the estate is closed. Typical SC probate runs 9–15 months.
Quick-reference comparison of the procedural rules that drive every cross-border estate administration decision.
| Topic | North Carolina | South Carolina |
|---|---|---|
| Governing chapter | Administration of Decedents' Estates. N.C.G.S. Ch. 28A | South Carolina Probate Code. S.C. Code Title 62, Article 3 |
| Court jurisdiction | Clerk of Superior Court in the decedent's county of domicile sits as the probate court. N.C.G.S. § 28A-2-1 | A dedicated county Probate Court has exclusive jurisdiction. S.C. Code § 62-1-302 |
| Small-estate threshold | $20,000 personal property (or $30,000 to a surviving spouse who is the sole heir) qualifies for collection by affidavit. N.C.G.S. § 28A-25-1 | $25,000 personal property qualifies for summary administration by affidavit after a 30-day waiting period. S.C. Code § 62-3-1201 |
| Typical timeline | Roughly 6–12 months for a routine estate; complex or contested estates can run several years. | Roughly 8–12 months for a routine estate; the formal process is generally not closed before the creditor claim period ends. |
| Creditor notice period | Three months from the first publication of notice to creditors. N.C.G.S. § 28A-14-1 | Eight months from first publication, or one year from the date of death, whichever is earlier. S.C. Code § 62-3-801 |
| Personal-representative bond | Bond is required unless waived by the will or by all heirs; nonresident PRs typically must post bond. N.C.G.S. § 28A-8-1 | Bond is not required if waived by the will, but the court may require a bond on its own motion or on creditor demand. S.C. Code § 62-3-603 |
| Accounting frequency | 90-day inventory, then annual accountings until a final account closes the estate. N.C.G.S. § 28A-21-1 | Inventory and appraisement within 90 days; accountings are filed with the petition for final settlement (no mandatory annual accounting in informal administration). S.C. Code § 62-3-1001 |
| Court filing fee structure | Clerk's fee of 40¢ per $100 of personal property administered, capped at $6,000. N.C.G.S. § 7A-307 | Tiered filing fee schedule based on the gross estate value, plus modest per-document fees. S.C. Code § 8-21-770 |
Statutory minimums are one thing; real estates rarely close at the minimum. The factors below explain why most NC and SC probates take longer than the statutes suggest.
The fastest possible NC probate is approximately 6 months: 3 months for the creditor period, plus 3 months for inventory, accounting, and distribution. The fastest SC probate is approximately 10 months: 8 months for creditor claims plus 2 months for administration. These are theoretical minimums for the simplest possible estate — no real estate, no disputes, no tax complications, no out-of-state issues.
In practice, most NC probates run 10–20 months and most SC probates run 9–15 months. The most common reasons probate runs long:
County variation also matters. Mecklenburg County (Charlotte) and Wake County (Raleigh) handle high volumes and can produce delays at peak times. Charleston County and Greenville County probate courts have their own scheduling rhythms. Rural counties often move faster simply because they have fewer cases.
Probate costs come from four sources: court filing fees, publication costs, executor compensation, and attorney fees. Below are typical numbers for NC and SC estates.
NC charges a flat $120 probate filing fee. SC uses a sliding scale based on estate value — small estates pay around $25; larger estates can pay over $2,500. Both states charge per-page fees for certified copies and additional filings.
The cost to publish notice to creditors in a newspaper of general circulation. NC requires 4 weekly publications; SC requires 3. Charlotte and Raleigh newspapers tend toward the higher end of the range.
NC allows reasonable compensation under N.C.G.S. § 28A-23-3 — the Clerk approves the amount based on time spent and estate complexity, commonly 3–5% of the gross estate. SC uses a similar reasonable-compensation standard. Family executors often waive the fee.
Probate attorney fees depend on estate complexity. Simple uncontested estates with one residence and routine accounts: $2,500–$5,000. Complex estates with business interests, multi-state property, or disputed claims: $7,500–$15,000 or more. Contested estates with litigation can exceed $30,000.
Probate is unavoidable for any asset the decedent owned individually with no beneficiary designation or joint owner. Each tool below transfers an asset outside probate when used correctly.
Assets titled in the trust pass to beneficiaries privately, immediately, without court involvement. A trust holds property in any state — avoiding ancillary probate — and operates continuously during incapacity. See Revocable Living Trusts for full details on funding and trustee succession.
Retirement accounts (IRAs, 401(k)s), life insurance, and annuities pass by named beneficiary directly — entirely outside probate. Coordinating these designations with your will or trust is critical; an outdated beneficiary form can override your plan.
Property held by spouses or partners as joint tenants with right of survivorship passes automatically to the surviving owner. NC and SC both recognize tenancy by the entirety for married couples, which adds creditor protection during life. Joint ownership avoids probate but offers no flexibility for distribution.
Bank accounts can be payable-on-death (POD); brokerage accounts and securities can be transfer-on-death (TOD). The named beneficiary receives the asset directly upon death without probate. Simple, free, and widely available — but only for the specific accounts that allow it.
North Carolina allows a Revocable Transfer-on-Death Deed for real property — recorded during life, transferring title automatically at death. Useful for a primary residence when a full trust is not warranted. SC does not currently recognize TOD deeds for real estate.
NC estates under $20,000 personal property may use the small estate affidavit procedure under N.C.G.S. § 28A-25-1. SC estates under $25,000 personal property (with no real estate) may use the small estate procedure under S.C. Code § 62-3-1201. Both bypass full probate.
Even with thorough planning, some situations require probate. Recognizing them in advance lets the family budget for the time and cost rather than being surprised.
For each of these situations, the planning question is whether the probate cost and delay can be reduced. A small estate affidavit, a streamlined small estate procedure, or a TOD designation may eliminate some assets from full probate even when the estate cannot avoid probate altogether.
Probate is filed in the decedent’s county of residence. Below are the major NC and SC county courts where Ryan’s clients most commonly probate estates. Ryan serves all 100 NC counties and all 46 SC counties.
| County (Major City) | Court | Address | State |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mecklenburg County (Charlotte) | Clerk of Superior Court | 832 East 4th Street, Charlotte, NC 28202 | NC |
| Wake County (Raleigh) | Clerk of Superior Court | 316 Fayetteville Street, Raleigh, NC 27601 | NC |
| Durham County (Durham) | Clerk of Superior Court | 201 East Main Street, Durham, NC 27701 | NC |
| Guilford County (Greensboro) | Clerk of Superior Court | 201 South Eugene Street, Greensboro, NC 27401 | NC |
| New Hanover County (Wilmington) | Clerk of Superior Court | 316 Princess Street, Wilmington, NC 28401 | NC |
| Buncombe County (Asheville) | Clerk of Superior Court | 60 Court Plaza, Asheville, NC 28801 | NC |
| Charleston County (Charleston) | Charleston County Probate Court | 84 Broad Street, Charleston, SC 29401 | SC |
| Richland County (Columbia) | Richland County Probate Court | 1701 Main Street, Columbia, SC 29201 | SC |
| Greenville County (Greenville) | Greenville County Probate Court | 301 University Ridge, Greenville, SC 29601 | SC |
| Beaufort County (Bluffton/Beaufort) | Beaufort County Probate Court | 102 Ribaut Road, Beaufort, SC 29902 | SC |
Primary sources for everything cited on this page.
Ryan handles probate avoidance planning across all 100 NC counties and all 46 SC counties. Below are cities with dedicated practice-area pages addressing local probate venues and considerations.