How to Avoid Probate in Indiana

Quick answer

Combine a recorded transfer-on-death (TOD) deed for your home (Ind. Code §32-17-14) with payable-on-death and beneficiary designations on bank and retirement accounts. In Indiana, doing this can shrink the remaining probate estate below the $100,000 small-estate threshold, so your heirs can claim what's left with a simple affidavit (Ind. Code §29-1-8-1) and skip formal probate altogether — and Indiana's small-estate affidavit can even transfer real estate, which most states' cannot.

Educational guide — not legal advice. Laws and figures change; confirm current details with a licensed Indiana attorney before relying on them.

Why probate avoidance matters in Indiana

In Indiana, the cost of going through full probate is real: For most Indiana families, probate runs roughly 3% to 7% of the estate's value once you add attorney fees, the personal representative's compensation, and court costs. Indiana does not set these fees by statute — attorney and executor fees must be 'just and reasonable' as approved by the court — so a routine $400,000 estate handled with unsupervised administration might cost on the order of $5,000 to $15,000, while a contested or supervised estate costs more. Court filing itself is modest: a $120 base probate fee plus small document and recordkeeping fees (commonly totaling about $150–$180).

That’s the bill you can avoid (or substantially reduce) by setting up the right legal tools before death. Most Indiana families can keep the majority of their estate out of probate using a few simple, low-cost moves.

The six tools that work in Indiana

1. Update beneficiary designations on retirement accounts and life insurance

Retirement accounts (401(k), 403(b), IRA, Roth IRA) and life insurance policies pass to the named beneficiary by operation of law — not through your will, and not through probate. This is true in every state, including Indiana.

For most Indiana households, retirement and life insurance assets are 40–70% of net worth, and all of it can pass outside probate just by keeping the beneficiary forms current.

What to do today: log into every retirement and life insurance account, check the named primary and contingent beneficiaries, update anything that’s stale.

2. Payable-on-death (POD) bank accounts

A POD designation on a checking or savings account names a beneficiary who can claim the account directly after death by showing the death certificate. No probate, no waiting. Indiana banks let you add POD designations for free.

POD designations work particularly well for operating cash accounts your family will need fast to cover funeral and immediate expenses.

3. Transfer-on-death (TOD) brokerage accounts

The same idea applied to investment accounts. Indiana brokerages (Fidelity, Schwab, Vanguard, and most others) let you add TOD beneficiaries to taxable brokerage accounts. The account passes to the named beneficiary at death without probate, and the cost basis still gets the step-up that would have occurred through probate.

4. Joint ownership with right of survivorship

Property held jointly with right of survivorship passes automatically to the surviving owner. The most common example: a married couple’s primary home titled as joint tenants with right of survivorship (or, in some states, tenancy by the entirety). The survivor records the death certificate to update title; no probate.

A cautionary note: don’t add an adult child as joint owner just to avoid probate without talking to an estate attorney first. Joint ownership exposes the asset to the joint owner’s creditors and divorces while you’re alive, and can create cost-basis or gift-tax issues.

5. Indiana’s real estate transfer-at-death tool

Indiana has the Transfer on Death Property Act, Ind. Code §32-17-14, which authorizes a transfer-on-death (TOD) deed for real estate. The owner signs and records the deed during life; it is revocable and the owner keeps full control until death, at which point the property passes to the named beneficiary outside probate.

6. A funded revocable living trust

For assets that aren’t covered by the above tools — real estate in a state without a TOD deed, business interests, tangible personal property of significant value — a funded revocable living trust handles the rest. Assets titled in the trust skip probate; the successor trustee distributes them privately at death.

A trust earns its setup cost in Indiana when:

  • You own real estate in more than one state (the trust avoids ancillary probate in each).
  • You have a complex family situation (blended family, special-needs child).
  • You want privacy.
  • Your estate is substantial enough that the avoided probate cost exceeds the trust’s setup cost.

For most middle-class Indiana families with simple finances, the first five tools above handle the vast majority of the estate, and a trust is optional. See Will vs. Trust: Which Do You Need? for the honest decision tree.

Indiana’s small estate procedure

If the estate is small enough, Indiana offers a streamlined alternative to full probate:

Indiana's small-estate affidavit procedure is in Ind. Code §29-1-8-1. For decedents dying after June 30, 2022, the gross probate estate (less liens and encumbrances) must not exceed $100,000 — raised from $50,000 effective July 1, 2022. At least 45 days must have passed since death, and no personal representative may be pending or appointed. Notably, Indiana allows the affidavit to be used to claim both personal property and (uncommon among states) real estate.

For real property specifically, Indiana is unusual in that its small-estate affidavit under Ind. Code §29-1-8-1 can transfer the decedent's real estate (not just personal property) when the $100,000 gross-estate limit and 45-day waiting period are met, avoiding a full probate to clear title.

A simple sequence for Indiana residents

  1. Update beneficiary designations on every retirement account, life insurance policy, and POD/TOD account.
  2. Confirm how your house is titled. Married couples should generally use joint tenancy with right of survivorship (or tenancy by the entirety where available). Single owners should consider Indiana’s real-estate transfer tool described above.
  3. Write a basic will to cover anything not handled above, and to name an executor and guardian for minor children.
  4. Sign a financial POA and healthcare directive. These cover incapacity while you’re alive.
  5. Only then evaluate whether you need a trust. Many Indiana families don’t.

Done in this order, most Indiana families can keep 80–95% of their estate out of probate for under $1,500 in legal fees and a few hours of paperwork.

When you should NOT try to avoid probate

A few honest caveats:

  • Probate has legitimate uses. It cuts off creditor claims, provides a public mechanism for resolving disputes, and gives the executor unquestioned legal authority. Total avoidance isn’t always the goal.
  • Small estates already get small-estate procedures. If your estate qualifies for Indiana’s simplified procedure, you don’t need elaborate trust planning.
  • Beneficiary designations override your will. Be careful — outdated designations can send assets to people you no longer intend.
  • Joint ownership has trade-offs. Don’t add joint owners purely to avoid probate without understanding the gift, creditor, and cost-basis implications.

For a deeper dive on the avoidance tools beyond Indiana-specific procedures, see our How to Avoid Probate guide.


This page explains Indiana probate avoidance in general terms as of 2026. It is not legal advice; specific rules and the availability of avoidance tools can change. Confirm current rules with a licensed Indiana attorney. Sources: Ind. Code §29-1-8-1, Ind. Code §29-1-10-13, Ind. Code §29-1-7.5, Ind. Code §29-1-7.5-4, Ind. Code §29-1-14-1, Ind. Code §32-17-14, Ind. Code §33-37-4-7.