South Carolina Probate Guide
If you've just lost someone and are facing the South Carolina probate process — this guide walks you through what it costs, how long it takes, the exact filings South Carolina requires, and whether you can avoid formal probate entirely.
Typical Timeline
8–18 months
Uncontested formal probate
Small Estate Threshold
$45,000
Affidavit for Collection of Personal Property (Form 420ES) and Summary Administration
Court
Probate Court
Filing fee: $25–$845
Executor Commission
Statutory scale
~$50,000 on a $1M estate
Probate is required for solely owned real estate and for personal property exceeding $45,000. Joint tenancy with right of survivorship, beneficiary designations, and revocable trusts bypass probate. South Carolina does NOT authorize TOD deeds for real estate.
Most South Carolina estates take 8 to 18 months. The 8-month creditor claim period (longest among the assigned states alongside PA) is the main timeline driver.
South Carolina's Affidavit for Collection of Personal Property (Form 420ES) and Summary Administration allows qualifying estates to skip formal probate.
| If the death occurred… | Small estate threshold |
|---|---|
| Personal property — current (Act No. 26 / H.3472, effective May 8, 2025) | $45,000 |
| Personal property — prior law, before May 8, 2025 | $25,000 |
Effective May 8, 2025 (Act No. 26 / H.3472), South Carolina raised its small estate threshold from $25,000 to $45,000. The affidavit can be used for personal property after a 30-day wait; summary administration is also available within the same dollar cap.
South Carolina caps personal-representative compensation at 5% of the personal property and 5% of sale proceeds of real property sold during administration, subject to a $50 minimum (S.C. Code § 62-3-718). Section 62-3-719 lets the court increase or decrease the fee for cause.
Example: An estate valued at $1,000,000 would yield an executor commission of approximately $50,000.
Attorney fees:
Attorney fees are not statutory; they must be reasonable and are typically billed hourly or as a flat fee subject to probate court review.
Multiple co-executors:
Co-PRs share a single statutory commission; the probate court allocates between them based on the services each performed.
Statute: S.C. Code §§ 62-3-718 and 62-3-719
Bond is not required if the will waives it, if the PR is the sole heir/devisee, or if all heirs/devisees waive bond. Otherwise, the court typically requires a bond equal to the value of the personal estate.
Statute: S.C. Code § 62-3-603
South Carolina has no state estate tax or inheritance tax. Only the federal estate tax applies — $15 million per individual or $30 million for married couples in 2026 under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act.
A surviving spouse may elect a one-third share of the decedent's probate estate under S.C. Code § 62-2-201, regardless of what the will provides. The election must be filed within 8 months of death or 6 months after probate of the will, whichever is later (S.C. Code § 62-2-205).
South Carolina's Healthy Connections Medicaid Estate Recovery Program recovers long-term care expenses from probate estates of recipients aged 55+. Recovery is deferred while a surviving spouse is alive or while a minor or disabled child survives. Because recovery is limited to probate assets, planning with non-probate transfers is highly effective.
The full South Carolina executor checklist has 23 milestones: 0 specific to South Carolina law (shown below — filings, forms, and court interactions tied to South Carolina statutes) and 23 universal duties that apply in every state (expandable at the end of the list). The same item never appears in both groups.
Obtain certified death certificates
Order at least 10-12 certified copies of the death certificate from the South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control, Division of Vital Records. These are required by the probate court, financial institutions, insurance companies, and government agencies.
Locate and review the will
Search for the decedent's original will and any codicils. South Carolina has adopted a modified version of the Uniform Probate Code (SC Code Title 62). Any person having custody of a will must deliver it to the probate court in the county where the decedent resided.
Secure estate property and valuables
Immediately secure the decedent's residence by changing locks if necessary. Safeguard valuables such as jewelry, cash, important documents, firearms, and collectibles. If the home will be vacant, arrange for regular checks, maintain climate control, and notify the homeowner's insurance carrier of the vacancy. Secure vehicles, safe deposit boxes, and storage units. Document the condition of all property with photographs.
Determine administration type and file petition
South Carolina offers informal probate (handled by the probate judge without a hearing), formal probate (requires a hearing), and supervised administration. Qualifying small estates may use a simplified affidavit procedure under SC Code Section 62-3-1201. File with the probate court in the county where the decedent was domiciled.
Receive Letters Testamentary or Letters of Administration
After appointment, Letters are issued to the personal representative. Under informal proceedings, Letters may be issued quickly. The representative must accept appointment and may need to post a bond. Obtain multiple certified copies.
Notify the Social Security Administration
Report the death to the Social Security Administration at 1-800-772-1213 if the funeral home has not already done so. Benefits received after the date of death must be returned. Surviving spouses and dependent children may be eligible for survivor benefits.
Cancel services, subscriptions, and forward mail
Forward the decedent's mail through USPS to the executor's address or a secure location to capture bills, tax documents, and creditor correspondence. Cancel or transfer utilities (electric, gas, water, internet, phone), streaming services, gym memberships, magazine subscriptions, and other recurring payments. Notify the landlord if the decedent rented. Cancel the decedent's driver's license, voter registration, and passport to help prevent identity theft.
Publish notice to creditors
Publish a Notice to Creditors in a newspaper of general circulation in the county, once a week for three successive weeks, as required by SC Code Section 62-3-801. Creditors have eight months from the date of the first publication of the appointment to present their claims. Also mail notice to all known creditors.
Notify financial institutions
Send certified copies of the death certificate and Letters to all banks, brokerage firms, insurance companies, and retirement account custodians. Request date-of-death valuations.
Open an estate bank account
Obtain an EIN from the IRS via Form SS-4 and open a checking account in the name of the estate. All estate income and expense payments should flow through this account.
File IRS Form 56 (Notice of Fiduciary Relationship)
File IRS Form 56 to notify the IRS that you are acting as the fiduciary (executor or administrator) for the decedent's estate. This establishes your authority to receive the decedent's tax information, file returns on their behalf, and correspond with the IRS regarding estate matters. File this form promptly after receiving Letters.
Maintain insurance and pay ongoing estate expenses
Review and maintain all insurance policies on estate property, including homeowner's insurance, auto insurance, and any umbrella liability coverage. Lapsed coverage during administration can expose the estate to significant liability. Continue paying ongoing obligations from the estate bank account: mortgage or rent, property taxes, HOA fees, storage unit fees, and essential maintenance. Keep detailed records of all payments for the final accounting.
File inventory of estate assets
Prepare and file an inventory of all estate assets within three months of appointment. The inventory must include all real and personal property with date-of-death fair market values. Send copies to interested persons.
Handle digital assets and online accounts
Identify and secure the decedent's digital assets, including email accounts, social media profiles, cloud storage, cryptocurrency wallets, online banking, and digital subscriptions. Most states have adopted the Revised Uniform Fiduciary Access to Digital Assets Act (RUFADAA), which governs fiduciary access to digital accounts. Check the decedent's devices, password managers, and records for account credentials. Contact service providers to memorialize or close accounts as appropriate.
File claims against life insurance and benefits policies
File claims on all life insurance policies, accidental death policies, and any other insurance or death benefits payable to the estate or named beneficiaries. Provide certified death certificates and completed claim forms to each insurance carrier. Note that policies with named beneficiaries generally pass outside of probate directly to the beneficiary, but proceeds payable to the estate must be inventoried.
File final personal income tax return (Form 1040 and South Carolina Form SC1040)
File the decedent's final federal income tax return (Form 1040) and South Carolina individual income tax return (Form SC1040) for the period from January 1 through the date of death. South Carolina imposes a graduated income tax. A surviving spouse may file jointly.
File estate income tax return (Form 1041 and South Carolina Form SC1041) if applicable
If the estate earns more than $600 in gross income during administration, file federal Form 1041 and South Carolina Fiduciary Income Tax Return (Form SC1041). The estate is a separate taxpayer.
File estate tax return (Form 706) if applicable
If the gross estate exceeds the federal estate tax exemption, file federal Form 706 within nine months of death. South Carolina does not impose a separate state estate or inheritance tax. Form 706 may be filed for portability.
Review and pay valid creditor claims
Evaluate all claims presented within the eight-month claims period. Pay valid claims from estate funds in the statutory order of priority: costs of administration, funeral expenses, debts with federal preference, taxes, and all other claims.
Distribute specific bequests
Distribute any specific gifts or bequests identified in the will, such as jewelry, heirlooms, specific dollar amounts, or particular assets to named beneficiaries. Obtain signed receipts from each beneficiary. Ensure adequate reserves are maintained for taxes, administration costs, and any pending creditor claims before making distributions.
Distribute residuary estate to beneficiaries
After all debts, taxes, expenses, and specific bequests have been satisfied, distribute the remaining estate assets to the residuary beneficiaries as directed by the will or South Carolina intestacy law (SC Code Section 62-2-102). South Carolina provides the surviving spouse a homestead allowance, family allowance, and exempt property right. Obtain signed receipts from all beneficiaries.
File closing statement or petition for court order
Under informal proceedings, the personal representative may close the estate by filing a Closing Statement under SC Code Section 62-3-1003. Under supervised administration, a petition for final distribution and discharge must be filed.
Close the estate bank account
After all distributions are complete, close the estate bank account. Confirm all checks have cleared and the balance is zero. Retain financial records for at least five years.
Out-of-state decedents who owned South Carolina real estate need ancillary probate in the South Carolina county Probate Court where the property is located.
Most South Carolina estates take 8 to 18 months. The 8-month creditor claim period sets the floor; complex or contested estates take longer.
Court filing fees include a base of $25–$95 and an inventory fee starting at 0.25% of estate value (capped by statute). Add executor fees (up to 5%) and attorney fees — total costs commonly run 3–7% of the estate.
$45,000 in personal property as of May 8, 2025 (previously $25,000). Use the Affidavit for Collection of Personal Property (Form 420ES) after a 30-day wait or summary administration.
Not legally required, but most executors hire one. South Carolina probate courts apply strict procedural rules and accounting requirements that trip up DIY administrators.
Yes — revocable living trusts, joint tenancy with right of survivorship, payable-on-death accounts, and beneficiary designations all bypass probate. Note: South Carolina does NOT allow TOD deeds for real estate.
Within 30 days of notice of the death, the person with custody of the will must deliver it to the probate court or to the named personal representative (S.C. Code § 62-2-901).
No. South Carolina has no estate or inheritance tax. Only the federal estate tax may apply, and only to estates above $15M individual / $30M per couple (2026).
No. South Carolina has not adopted the Uniform Real Property Transfer on Death Act. Use a living trust, joint tenancy, or life estate to keep real estate out of probate.
Are you a South Carolina probate attorney?
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This page is informational, not legal advice. Probate rules, thresholds, fees, and tax exemptions change. For your specific situation, consult a licensed South Carolina probate attorney.