How Much Does an Executor Get Paid in Michigan?

Quick answer

Michigan has no statutory percentage for executor (personal representative) fees — the standard is "reasonable" compensation (MCL §700.3719), based on the time, difficulty, and skill the administration required. There's no fixed percentage, and the fee is subject to challenge by interested parties.

Educational guide — not legal or tax advice. Fee rules and figures change; confirm current rules with a licensed Michigan attorney before relying on them.

What an executor gets paid in Michigan

Michigan (MCL §700.3719) entitles a personal representative to "reasonable" compensation for services performed, with no statutory percentage. Reasonableness turns on the time spent, the difficulty and novelty of the issues, the skill required, and the value of the estate.

The executor (in some states called the personal representative) is the person who settles the estate — gathering assets, paying debts and taxes, and distributing what’s left. The fee is their compensation for that work, paid out of the estate before the beneficiaries receive their shares.

A Michigan example

Because Michigan uses a "reasonable" standard, executor compensation varies with the actual work. For a typical $500,000 Michigan estate, reasonable fees often fall in the low five figures — but they must be justified and can be contested by heirs.

Statutory vs. “reasonable” — how Michigan decides

With no fixed Michigan schedule, the personal representative should document hours and tasks. Interested parties can petition the court to review a fee, and the court can reduce one it finds excessive.

A quick map of how states handle this: some (like California, New York, Florida, and Ohio) set the fee by a statutory percentage; others (like Pennsylvania, Illinois, and Michigan) use a “reasonable compensation” standard with no fixed schedule. Michigan falls into the reasonable camp.

Should a family executor in Michigan even take the fee?

Here’s the part most guides skip. An executor’s fee is taxable income to the person who receives it. An inheritance, by contrast, is not taxed as income to the beneficiary.

So when the executor is also a main beneficiary — a spouse or child inheriting most of the estate — taking the fee often makes no sense. The same dollars come to them either way, but the fee is taxed and the inheritance isn’t. In that situation, many Michigan executors simply waive the commission and take their inheritance instead.

Taking the fee usually makes sense when:

  • The executor is not a beneficiary (or only a small one), so waiving wouldn’t get them the money anyway.
  • The work is unusually heavy — a contested estate, a business to wind down, property to sell.
  • The executor is in a lower tax bracket than the bracket the inheritance would otherwise sit in (rare, but possible).

There’s no obligation to take the maximum — or to take anything. It’s a choice, and in Michigan it’s often a tax decision more than anything else.

What the fee does and doesn’t cover

The commission compensates the executor for ordinary administration. Two things to keep separate:

  • The attorney’s fee is separate. The estate’s lawyer is paid on top of the executor’s commission — and in some states (California is the clearest example) the attorney is entitled to the same statutory amount as the executor, effectively doubling the statutory cost.
  • Extraordinary work can be billed extra. Selling real estate, running a business, handling litigation or a tax audit — Michigan courts can approve additional compensation for work beyond routine administration.

Executor fees vs. total probate cost in Michigan

The executor’s fee is only one line on the probate bill. Court costs, the attorney’s fee, appraisals, bonds, and publication all add up on top of it. To see the full picture for Michigan, read How Much Does Probate Cost in Michigan?.

And remember: assets that avoid probate entirely — through a funded living trust, beneficiary designations, or joint ownership — generally pay no executor commission at all, because they never pass through the estate the executor administers.

The honest takeaway

In Michigan, an executor is entitled to compensation for real work — and they should be paid for it when they’ve earned it and aren’t already inheriting the money. But if you’re the executor and the main heir, run the simple comparison first: the fee is taxable; your inheritance isn’t. Often the smartest move is to waive the commission and take your share.

If you’re choosing an executor, pick someone trustworthy and organized over someone who’ll charge the most — and consider keeping assets in a trust or beneficiary designations where you can, so less of the estate runs through a fee-charging probate at all.

Executor fees in other states

Compare Michigan with what executors are paid in other states:


This page explains executor (personal representative) compensation in Michigan in general terms as of 2026. It is not legal or tax advice; fee rules, statutes, and figures change and depend on your situation. Confirm current rules with a licensed Michigan attorney, and ask a tax professional before waiving or accepting a fee. Sources: Michigan Courts (courts.michigan.gov); MCL §700.3719 (compensation of personal representative).