Being named executor in a loved one’s will is both an honor and a serious legal responsibility. If the person who died lived in The Bronx — whether in Riverdale, Pelham Bay, Throgs Neck, Morrisania, Fordham, or anywhere across the borough — the estate is administered through the Bronx County Surrogate’s Court. As executor, you become a fiduciary: a person the law trusts to manage someone else’s property honestly, prudently, and in strict accordance with New York’s Surrogate’s Court Procedure Act (SCPA) and Estates, Powers and Trusts Law (EPTL).
This guide explains, step by step, what an executor of a Bronx estate actually does in 2026 — from filing the probate petition to making final distributions — and where the deadlines, costs, and legal duties come from. At Morgan Legal Group, attorney Russel Morgan, Esq. and our team guide Bronx executors through every stage of this process.
Who Is the Executor, and When Does the Role Begin?
The executor (sometimes called the personal representative) is the person named in the will to carry out the decedent’s wishes. Importantly, being named in the will is not enough to give you legal authority. A will, on its own, confers no power to act. You only become the legally empowered executor when the Bronx County Surrogate’s Court admits the will to probate and issues you Letters Testamentary under SCPA §1414.
Letters Testamentary are the court-issued certificate that banks, brokerages, title companies, and government agencies will demand before they release the decedent’s assets to you. Until those Letters issue, your authority is limited or nonexistent — which is why beginning the probate process promptly is one of the most important early duties.
In urgent situations — for example, where estate assets must be protected, a business kept running, or a property safeguarded while the will is still being proved — the court may issue Preliminary Letters Testamentary under SCPA §1412. These give the nominated executor interim authority to act while the full probate proceeding is pending, which can be valuable when a Bronx estate includes a building, a co-op, or a small business that cannot simply wait.
The Probate Process in Bronx County Surrogate’s Court
Probate is the legal proceeding that validates the will and formally appoints the executor. In The Bronx, this all happens at the Bronx County Surrogate’s Court. Here is the sequence an executor follows:
- File the Petition for Probate. The executor files a verified Petition for Probate together with the original signed will and a certified copy of the death certificate. The petition identifies the decedent, the witnesses, the assets, and — critically — the distributees (the persons who would inherit under New York law if there were no will).
- Obtain jurisdiction over the distributees. Every distributee must be given the chance to respond. This is accomplished either by each one signing a Waiver and Consent, or, where consent is not given, by serving a citation that orders them to appear in Bronx County Surrogate’s Court on a stated return date.
- Return date and decree. If no one files objections by the return date, the court signs a decree granting probate, admitting the will and authorizing the appointment.
- Letters Testamentary issue. The Surrogate issues Letters Testamentary (SCPA §1414), and the executor’s real work begins.
What the Executor Does After Letters Issue
Once empowered, the executor’s core fiduciary duties unfold in a logical order:
- Marshal (collect) the assets. Open an estate bank account, retitle accounts, secure real property (a common task in The Bronx, where many estates include a house, a multi-family building, or a co-op apartment), and inventory everything the decedent owned.
- Notify creditors and pay valid debts. The executor reviews claims, pays legitimate debts, and handles final expenses. Funds must be preserved for creditors before any inheritance is paid out.
- File tax returns and pay taxes. This includes the decedent’s final income tax returns and, where applicable, estate tax returns (discussed below).
- Account to the beneficiaries. The executor prepares an accounting showing every dollar received and spent.
- Distribute the remaining estate. Only after debts, expenses, and taxes are satisfied does the executor distribute what remains to the beneficiaries named in the will.
A central legal principle ties all of this together: an executor owes the estate and its beneficiaries the highest duty of loyalty and prudence. Self-dealing, commingling estate funds with personal funds, and favoring one beneficiary over another are all breaches of fiduciary duty that can expose an executor to personal liability.
Executor Duties at a Glance
| Duty | What It Involves | Source / Authority |
|---|---|---|
| Begin probate | File Petition for Probate, original will, certified death certificate | SCPA Article 14 |
| Obtain appointment | Receive Letters Testamentary from Bronx County Surrogate’s Court | SCPA §1414 |
| Interim authority (if urgent) | Request Preliminary Letters Testamentary | SCPA §1412 |
| Marshal assets | Open estate account, secure real property, inventory holdings | EPTL fiduciary duties |
| Pay debts & creditors | Review and satisfy valid claims before distribution | SCPA / EPTL |
| Handle taxes | File final income & any estate tax returns | NY Tax Law; IRS |
| Account & distribute | Provide accounting, distribute per the will | SCPA / EPTL |
Timeline and Costs for a Bronx Executor
For a straightforward, uncontested estate, probate in Bronx County Surrogate’s Court typically takes about three to six months from filing to the issuance of Letters, though estates with hard-to-locate distributees, real property to sell, or disputes can take considerably longer.
On cost, two figures matter:
- Attorney’s fees for handling a probate typically range from about $3,000 to $10,000, depending on the size and complexity of the estate, the number of distributees, and whether any disputes arise. Estates with litigation cost more.
- The court filing fee is graduated based on the value of the estate under SCPA §2402 — larger estates pay a higher filing fee. We do not quote a fixed number here because the correct fee depends on your estate’s value; confirm the exact amount with the court or your attorney.
These are general ranges. Because every Bronx estate is different, the most reliable way to estimate your costs is a consultation.
When Is Full Probate Not Required? Small Estates in The Bronx
Not every estate needs a full probate proceeding. If the decedent’s personal property is modest, the estate may qualify for voluntary administration (a “small estate” proceeding) under SCPA Article 13. This streamlined process uses an affidavit rather than a full petition and is handled through the same Surrogate’s Court.
A crucial caveat for Bronx families: real property is generally excluded from the small-estate calculation, but the presence of real estate (a house, a brownstone, or a co-op) often means full probate is still required to transfer title. Many Bronx estates that look “small” on paper do not qualify because of real property. Our small estate affidavit guide explains the threshold in more detail.
Estate Taxes: What the Executor Should Know in 2026
One of the executor’s duties is to determine whether the estate owes New York estate tax. For 2026, the New York estate tax exclusion amount is $7,350,000. Estates valued at or below that amount generally owe no New York estate tax.
New York also has a so-called “cliff.” If the taxable estate exceeds 105% of the exclusion — that is, $7,717,500 in 2026 — the exclusion is lost entirely, and the whole estate becomes taxable, not just the amount over the threshold. This makes careful valuation and planning especially important for higher-value Bronx estates, including those with appreciated real estate. Always confirm current figures and any federal obligations with qualified counsel.
Related Guides on This Site
- Probate Overview — the big-picture explanation of how probate works in New York.
- Surrogate’s Court Guide — what to expect when you appear in Bronx County Surrogate’s Court.
- Small Estate Affidavit — whether your Bronx estate qualifies for the simplified process.
- Contested Probate — what happens when a will is challenged or objections are filed.
Frequently Asked Questions
Where is probate handled for someone who lived in The Bronx?
Probate for a Bronx resident is handled at the Bronx County Surrogate’s Court. That is where the executor files the Petition for Probate, the original will, and the certified death certificate, and where the court issues Letters Testamentary under SCPA §1414.
How long does it take to become the executor in The Bronx?
For an uncontested estate, it commonly takes about three to six months from filing to the issuance of Letters Testamentary. If urgent action is needed before then, the court may issue Preliminary Letters Testamentary under SCPA §1412 so the nominated executor can protect estate assets in the meantime.
Can I act as executor before the court issues Letters?
Generally, no. A will alone gives you no authority to access bank accounts or transfer property. You need Letters Testamentary from Bronx County Surrogate’s Court — or, on a showing of need, Preliminary Letters under SCPA §1412 — before institutions will recognize your authority.
What does it cost to probate an estate in The Bronx?
Attorney’s fees typically run from about $3,000 to $10,000 depending on complexity, and the court filing fee is graduated by estate value under SCPA §2402. We do not quote a fixed filing-fee number because it depends on the estate’s value; confirm the exact amount with the court or your attorney.
Does my Bronx relative’s estate need full probate if it’s small?
Maybe not. If the personal property is modest, you may use voluntary administration under SCPA Article 13. However, real property is generally excluded from that calculation, so a Bronx estate that includes a house, brownstone, or co-op often still requires full probate to transfer title.
Speak With a Bronx Probate Attorney
Serving as executor of a Bronx estate carries real legal weight — and real personal exposure if duties are mishandled. Russel Morgan, Esq. and Morgan Legal Group help executors across The Bronx file in Bronx County Surrogate’s Court, obtain Letters Testamentary, and fulfill every fiduciary obligation correctly.
Schedule a 30-minute consultation to discuss your role and your next steps.
Further reading from Morgan Legal Group: when you should bring in a probate attorney.