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Probate Court Wiki · Florida

Broward County
Probate Court

Fort Lauderdale, Florida Pop. 1.9MNo Estate Tax

Independent Research Notice: TheProbateCourt.com is an independent research and publication company. We are not affiliated with Broward County Probate Court, the Florida court system, or any government agency. All information is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice.

Overview

Broward County (Fort Lauderdale) is a major Florida probate jurisdiction serving a population of 1.9M with approximately 7,500 probate cases filed annually. The system processes roughly ~1,250 cases per judge. Broward County's unique characteristics include a large retiree population, significant snowbird estate issues (multi-state domicile disputes between Florida and northern states), high condominium estate complexity, and large Jewish and Caribbean immigrant estate complexity. The Circuit Court – Probate Division handles estate administration, guardianship, conservatorship, and trust proceedings.

Key Distinguishing Feature

Large retiree population; significant snowbird estate issues (multi-state domicile disputes); high condominium estate complexity; large Jewish and Caribbean immigrant estate complexity.

Quick Facts

Court Type
Circuit Court – Probate Division
Judges / Departments
~6 judges
Annual Filings
~7,500
Filings Per Judge
~1,250
Simple Timeline
6–12 mo
Complex Timeline
18–36+ mo
Fee Structure
Statutory (Fla. Stat. §733.617)
Small Estate Threshold
$75,000
Tax Status
None (no FL estate tax)

The Probate Process: Step by Step

1

File Petition for Administration

2–6 weeks from death

Personal representative (PR) files with circuit court. Original will lodged. Death certificate required.

2

Notice to Creditors + 3-Month Claims Period

3 months (statutory)

Florida requires notice to creditors and a 3-month claims period (Fla. Stat. §733.702). Shorter than California's 4-month mandatory period.

3

Inventory Filed

60 days from appointment

PR files formal inventory within 60 days of appointment (Fla. Stat. §733.604). All assets listed.

4

Pay Claims, Taxes, and Expenses

2–4 months

Florida has no estate tax. Federal estate tax applies above $13.99M. PR pays valid creditor claims in statutory priority order.

5

Petition for Discharge

1–3 months

PR files final accounting and petition for discharge. Court reviews and approves. Assets distributed to beneficiaries.

6

Order of Discharge

Weeks after hearing

Court issues Order of Discharge. Case closed.

Timeline by Case Type

Case TypeMinimumTypicalExtended
Simple uncontested estate6–12 mo6–12 moN/A if no complications
Estate with real property6–12 mo12–18 mo18–30 mo if sale contested
Estate with business interests9–14 mo14–24 mo24–48+ mo if valuation disputed
Contested / will contest18–36+ mo18–36+ moUp to 7+ years with appeals
Guardianship (ongoing)3–6 mo to establishIndefinite maintenanceAnnual reports; court review

Cost Benchmarks

Fee Structure: Statutory (Fla. Stat. §733.617). Costs are estimates for planning purposes only. Actual costs vary based on estate complexity, disputes, and professional rates. Consult a licensed attorney for specific guidance.
Estate ValueAttorney FeesExecutor FeesCombinedAdd'l CostsTotal Range% of Estate
$500,000$15,000 (statutory 3%)$15,000 (statutory 3%)$30,000$2,000–$6,000$32,000–$36,0006.4%–7.2%
$1,000,000$22,500 (statutory)$22,500 (statutory)$45,000$3,000–$10,000$48,000–$55,0004.8%–5.5%
$3,000,000$52,500 (statutory)$52,500 (statutory)$105,000$5,000–$20,000$110,000–$125,0003.67%–4.17%

Attorney Intelligence: Real Case Patterns

The following case patterns are composite illustrations based on common probate scenarios in this jurisdiction. They are not accounts of specific individuals.

CASE PATTERN #1: THE SNOWBIRD DOMICILE DISPUTE

A Broward County decedent split time between Fort Lauderdale and New York. Both states claimed domicile — and both states' tax authorities sought estate tax jurisdiction. The domicile dispute ran 18 months; New York ultimately prevailed, subjecting the estate to New York estate tax on $8.2M.

Common Estate Planning Failures

Failure ModeFrequencyConsequence
No revocable living trustMost commonAll assets titled in decedent's name go through full probate
Trust exists but never fundedExtremely commonUnfunded trust is legally valid, operationally useless — assets still probate
Will drafted 10–20 years ago; never updatedVery commonOutdated executors, guardians, beneficiaries; potential disputes
Real estate not titled to trustCommonProperty triggers full probate even if other assets are in trust
Beneficiary designations not updated after life eventsCommonEx-spouses, deceased beneficiaries, or wrong persons receive assets by contract
No coordination between legal, tax, financial advisorsCommonContradictory asset structures; unintended taxable events; gap assets
DIY estate plan (online forms, unwitnessed)GrowingHolographic will disputes; inadequate execution; court challenges
No successor trustee named or willing to serveModerateCourt petition required; delays and costs
Assets held in joint tenancy without tax planningCommonAvoids probate but creates step-up basis issues, gift tax exposure, loss of control
Digital assets not addressedEmergingCryptocurrency, online accounts, digital businesses inaccessible at death

How to Avoid Probate in Florida

  • 1

    Revocable Living Trust (most comprehensive — avoids Florida's summary and formal probate)

  • 2

    Small Estate Disposition Without Administration (Fla. Stat. §735.301 — expenses less than exempt property)

  • 3

    Summary Administration (Fla. Stat. §735.201 — estate under $75,000 or decedent dead 2+ years)

  • 4

    Beneficiary Designations and POD/TOD accounts

  • 5

    Enhanced Life Estate (Lady Bird) Deeds (Florida allows — real property transfer at death without probate)

  • 6

    Joint Tenancy / Tenancy by Entirety (married couples; avoids probate for homestead)

Key Statutes & Legal Authority

Statute / CodeProvision
Fla. Stat. §733.617Compensation of personal representative — statutory percentage schedule
Fla. Stat. §733.702Creditor claims — 3-month claims period from publication
Fla. Stat. §733.604Inventory — due within 60 days of appointment
Fla. Stat. §735.201Summary administration — estate under $75,000 or decedent dead 2+ years
Fla. Stat. §735.301Disposition without administration — very small estates
Fla. Const. Art. X §4Homestead protection — restricts devise and creates forced heir scenarios

Frequently Asked Questions

Sources & References

  • Florida Office of the State Courts Administrator — Court Statistics 2023
  • Florida Statutes §733.617 (personal representative compensation)
  • Florida Statutes §733.702 (creditor claims — 3-month period)
  • Florida Statutes §735.201 (summary administration — $75,000 threshold)
  • Florida Constitution Art. X §4 (homestead protection)
  • TheProbateCourt.com Probate Insider Reference Series 2026
  • EstatelawMagazine.com — Estate Law Reference 2026
Disclaimer: TheProbateCourt.com is an independent research and publication company. We are not affiliated with Broward County Probate Court, the Florida court system, any government agency, or any probate court. All information provided is for general educational purposes only and does not constitute legal, tax, financial, or professional advice. Laws change frequently — always verify current statutes and consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction before making any legal decisions. © 2026 TheProbateCourt.com. All rights reserved.