How long does probate take in Connecticut?

Quick answer

A routine Connecticut estate typically takes 6 to 12 months. The statutory creditor-claim window is 150 days from appointment of the first fiduciary, the fiduciary then has 60 days to file a return and list of claims, and Connecticut estate/succession-tax clearance must be completed before final distribution — so contested or taxable estates can run a year or more.

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

Why probate takes that long

The single biggest factor that sets the floor on probate timing is the creditor claim period — the window during which people the decedent owed money must come forward.

In Connecticut: Creditors generally have 150 days from the date the first fiduciary is appointed to present claims; under Conn. Gen. Stat. §45a-356, a fiduciary who pays or distributes in good faith is not chargeable for claims presented after the 150-day period.

Until that window closes (or is otherwise resolved), the personal representative generally can’t safely distribute the estate to heirs. That’s why even the simplest Connecticut probate rarely finishes faster than the creditor period itself.

What can make Connecticut probate faster

  • Small-estate procedure. Under Conn. Gen. Stat. §45a-273, a small estate can be settled without full probate by filing an affidavit (PC-212) if the decedent's solely owned personal property — excluding assets passing outside probate by operation of law — does not exceed $40,000 and the decedent owned no solely owned real property in Connecticut at death.
  • A funded living trust. Assets held in a properly funded revocable living trust skip probate entirely. The successor trustee can usually distribute the trust assets privately within a month or two.
  • Beneficiary designations and joint ownership. Life insurance, retirement accounts, payable-on-death (POD) accounts, and jointly held property pass directly to the named person and never enter probate.
  • Cooperation among heirs. Uncontested probate moves dramatically faster than estates where heirs disagree.

What can make Connecticut probate slower

  • A contested will or family dispute. Will contests can add 6 to 24 months — sometimes years.
  • Real estate that has to be sold. Listing, accepting an offer, and closing on a property routinely adds 3 to 6 months.
  • A federal estate tax return. Estates over the federal exemption ($13.99M per person in 2025) must file IRS Form 706 within 9 months. The IRS review can take a year or more.
  • State estate or inheritance tax. Where applicable (Pennsylvania has an inheritance tax; several other states still have estate taxes), the state’s tax review can extend the timeline.
  • Out-of-state property. Real estate owned in another state typically requires a separate ancillary probate in that state, in parallel.
  • Missing or unreachable heirs. The personal representative must take reasonable steps to locate beneficiaries before closing.
  • Complex assets — business interests, partnership stakes, intellectual property, art collections — which require professional valuation.

When can the executor safely distribute?

In a typical, uncontested Connecticut estate with no surprises, the personal representative can usually begin distributing assets after the creditor claim period closes and any required tax returns clear. For most Connecticut families, that means plan on roughly the timeline above, and don’t promise heirs specific dates earlier than that.

If the estate qualifies for Connecticut’s small-estate procedure or a simplified administration, distribution can happen much faster — sometimes within weeks of death.

The honest takeaway

The shortest path through probate in Connecticut is the one you set up before anyone dies — by titling assets correctly, keeping beneficiary designations current, and, where it makes sense, using a living trust. Once probate has started, the timeline is largely set by the creditor period and the speed of the local court.

If you’re an executor staring down a Connecticut probate today, the single most useful thing you can do this week is gather the documents (the will, account statements, deeds, beneficiary designations) and talk to a licensed Connecticut probate attorney about whether full probate is even required, or whether a small-estate procedure will do the job.


This page explains Connecticut probate timing in general terms as of 2026. It is not legal advice; deadlines and procedures change and depend on your specific situation. Confirm current figures with the Connecticut courts or a licensed Connecticut attorney. Sources: Conn. Gen. Stat. §45a-107, Conn. Gen. Stat. §45a-106a, Conn. Gen. Stat. §45a-273, Conn. Gen. Stat. §45a-356, Conn. Gen. Stat. §45a-354, Conn. Gen. Stat. §45a-361.