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Supported States

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States currently supported by the probate calculator, with details on each state's fee structure.

Currently Supported

The probate calculator currently supports the following states:

State Fee Structure Notes
California Statutory percentage Fees set by Probate Code §10810
Florida Reasonable compensation Based on estate value and complexity
Missouri Percentage-based Statutory schedule with county variations
New York Statutory commissions Surrogate's Court Procedure Act §2307
Ohio Statutory schedule Based on estate value tiers
Texas Reasonable compensation Court-approved, typically 5% of gross estate

Coming Soon

We're actively adding support for additional states. The following are next on our roadmap:

  • Illinois
  • Pennsylvania
  • New Jersey
  • Georgia
  • North Carolina
  • Arizona
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Need a state that's not listed? Contact us at [email protected] to request it. We prioritize states based on user demand.

State-Specific Details

California

California uses a statutory fee schedule set by Probate Code §10810. Both the executor and attorney are entitled to the same percentage-based compensation:

Estate Value Fee Rate
First $100,000 4%
Next $100,000 3%
Next $800,000 2%
Next $9,000,000 1%
Next $15,000,000 0.5%
Above $25,000,000 Court determination

Florida

Florida allows "reasonable" compensation for both attorneys and personal representatives. The calculator uses common benchmarks based on estate value and complexity, but actual fees may vary.

New York

New York uses a statutory commission schedule under SCPA §2307 for executors/administrators. Attorney fees are typically based on reasonable value of services rendered.

Ohio, Missouri, Texas

Each follows its own statutory schedule or reasonable-compensation standard. The calculator applies the appropriate rules automatically.

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