Educational guide — not legal advice. Florida probate timelines vary by county and estate. Consult a licensed Florida attorney about your situation.
The short answer
For a routine formal administration, Florida probate without a will typically runs 6 to 12 months — about the same as a case with a will, occasionally a bit longer because of extra setup steps. Complex or contested estates run longer; small estates that qualify for summary administration can finish in a few months.
Dying without a will is called dying intestate. The estate still goes through probate; the difference is that Florida’s intestacy statute (Fla. Stat. §732.101 and following) decides who inherits, instead of a will.
Why “without a will” can add a little time
A few steps take longer when there’s no will:
1. Appointing the personal representative
With a will, the document names a personal representative, and the court usually appoints that person. Without a will, no one is nominated, so Florida law sets a priority order (Fla. Stat. §733.301): the surviving spouse has first priority, then the person chosen by a majority of the heirs, then the heir nearest in degree. If the heirs disagree about who should serve, that dispute can add weeks or months.
2. Identifying the heirs
The representative and the court must determine who the legal heirs are under the intestacy statute. For a simple family this is quick; for blended families, estranged relatives, or unknown heirs, it can require extra investigation and notices.
3. Posting a bond
A will often waives the bond for the personal representative. Without a will, the court frequently requires a bond (essentially an insurance policy protecting the estate), which the representative must arrange before being formally appointed.
The timeline, step by step
A typical Florida intestate formal administration:
| Stage | Rough timing |
|---|---|
| File petition for administration; court appoints personal representative (+ bond) | Weeks 1–6 |
| Letters of administration issued; representative gathers assets, opens estate account | Months 1–3 |
| Notice to creditors published; 3-month creditor claim period runs | Months 2–5 |
| Inventory filed; debts, taxes, and valid claims paid | Months 3–8 |
| Petition for distribution; court approves; assets distributed; estate closed | Months 6–12 |
Stages overlap. The creditor period is the main fixed floor.
The creditor claim period sets the floor
The reason almost no Florida estate closes in under a few months — will or not — is the creditor claim period. Under Fla. Stat. §733.702, creditors generally have 3 months after the first publication of notice (or 30 days after being served, whichever is later) to file claims. The representative typically waits out this window before distributing, so the estate can’t close much sooner. (A separate absolute 2-year cap under §733.710 bars most claims after two years.)
What slows it down further
- Will contests or heir disputes — though without a will there’s no will to contest, heirs can still fight over who inherits or who serves.
- Real estate that has to be sold before distribution.
- A federal estate tax return (only very large estates) — adds many months.
- Hard-to-find or disputed heirs.
- A backed-up county Surrogate/Circuit court.
The faster route: summary administration
If the probate estate (excluding homestead) is $75,000 or less, or the person has been deceased more than two years, the estate may qualify for summary administration (Fla. Stat. Chapter 735) — which has no personal representative and no creditor-period wait, and can conclude in a few months. This is available with or without a will. See Do You Have to Go Through Probate in Florida if There’s a Will?.
Can the family get money during probate?
A common worry when probate drags on: how does the family live in the meantime? Florida provides some relief that doesn’t have to wait for the estate to close:
- Family allowance. Florida law (Fla. Stat. §732.403) allows a reasonable family allowance — up to $18,000 — to be paid to a surviving spouse and minor or dependent children during administration, before creditors are fully paid. It’s meant to tide the family over.
- Exempt property. A surviving spouse or children can claim certain exempt property (household furnishings up to a set value, two vehicles, and some other items) that passes to them outside the claims of most creditors (Fla. Stat. §732.402).
- Protected homestead. As covered above, the homestead generally passes to the spouse or descendants outside the normal creditor process.
These protections apply with or without a will, and they’re an important reason the family isn’t left with nothing while a longer intestate case works through the court.
How to spare your family the longer version
The intestate process is avoidable. To shorten or skip probate for your own heirs:
- Make a will — it nominates a representative (and can waive bond), which removes the appointment delays above.
- Name beneficiaries on accounts and life insurance so they pass outside probate.
- Hold property jointly or in a funded living trust.
See How to Avoid Probate in Florida and Estate Planning in Florida.
The honest takeaway
Florida probate without a will usually takes 6 to 12 months — not dramatically longer than with a will, but with extra friction up front: the court must appoint an administrator, identify the heirs, and often require a bond. The 3-month creditor period sets the floor either way. The cleanest fix is to leave a will (and better yet, to title assets so they skip probate), which spares your family the intestate appointment delays entirely.
Common questions
Is probate longer without a will in Florida?
Usually only modestly. The extra time comes from appointing an administrator, identifying heirs, and posting a bond — steps a will streamlines. The 6–12 month range applies to most routine cases either way.
Who is in charge of probate if there’s no will in Florida?
The court appoints a personal representative by statutory priority (Fla. Stat. §733.301): the surviving spouse first, then the person chosen by a majority of heirs, then the nearest heir.
Can you avoid probate entirely without a will in Florida?
Assets with named beneficiaries, joint ownership, or in a living trust pass outside probate regardless of a will. But anything titled solely in the deceased’s name typically still requires probate.
How fast is summary administration in Florida?
Often just a few months. It’s available for estates of $75,000 or less (excluding homestead) or when the person died more than two years ago, and skips the creditor-period wait.
Can creditors still come after the estate without a will?
Yes. The creditor process is the same whether or not there’s a will. The personal representative must publish a notice to creditors, and valid claims filed within the roughly 3-month window get paid from the estate before heirs receive anything. The 2-year absolute cap under Fla. Stat. §733.710 still applies either way.
Does a small Florida estate without a will still need a lawyer?
It depends on the path. A formal administration generally requires an attorney; a summary administration where the single petitioner is the only interested person can sometimes be handled without one. For most families, a probate attorney keeps even a small intestate case moving.
Related reading
- Do You Have to Go Through Probate in Florida if There’s a Will?
- How Much Do Probate Lawyer Fees Cost in Florida?
- Estate Planning in Florida: The Complete Guide
- What Happens If You Die Without a Will in Florida
- What Is Probate and How Does It Work?
Educational information only — not legal advice. Florida probate timelines vary by county and estate; confirm your situation with a licensed Florida attorney. Sources: Fla. Stat. §§732.101, 733.301, 733.702, 733.710, Chapter 735; The Florida Bar.