Energy & Utilities
Financial Checklist When Someone Dies — UK Step-by-Step Guide
Complete financial checklist for dealing with someone's affairs after they die. What to cancel, who to notify, and handling the estate.
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5 min read
Dealing with finances after someone dies can feel overwhelming. This checklist guides you through each step in order.
Before Anything Else
| Task |
Priority |
| Register the death |
Within 5 days (8 in Scotland) |
| Get death certificates |
Order 10+ certified copies |
| Secure the property |
Lock home, check insurance |
| Locate the will |
Check home, solicitor, will storage |
| Notify immediate contacts |
Family, employer |
What You’ll Need
| Document |
Where to Get |
| Medical certificate of cause of death |
Doctor or hospital |
| Death certificate |
Registrar |
| Will (if exists) |
Home, solicitor, or will register |
| ID of deceased |
Passport, driving licence |
Tell Us Once Service
What It Does
The government’s Tell Us Once service notifies multiple organisations with one call:
| Organisations Notified |
Automatically Contacted |
| HMRC |
Yes |
| DWP (pensions, benefits) |
Yes |
| Passport Office |
Yes |
| DVLA |
Yes |
| Local council |
Yes |
| Council housing |
Yes |
How to Use It
- Registrar provides your Tell Us Once reference
- Use online at gov.uk or call
- Complete within 28 days of registration
- Covers most government departments
Financial Notifications Checklist
Banks and Building Societies
| Action |
Details |
| Notify each bank |
Call or visit with death certificate |
| Stop cards and cheques |
Request immediate freezing |
| Direct debits |
Some continue, some stop — review |
| Joint accounts |
Surviving holder can continue access |
| Sole accounts |
Frozen until probate granted |
What Banks Need
| Document |
Why |
| Death certificate |
Proof of death |
| Your ID |
Verify you’re entitled to act |
| Grant of Probate |
For large balances |
| Marriage/birth certificate |
To prove relationship |
Insurance and Pensions
| Task |
Organisation |
| Life insurance |
Contact insurer |
| Pension (workplace) |
Contact employer/pension provider |
| State pension |
Notified via Tell Us Once |
| Private pension |
Contact provider directly |
| Health insurance |
Cancel if applicable |
Bills and Subscriptions
| Type |
Action |
| Utilities (gas, electric, water) |
Transfer name or close |
| Council tax |
Notify council |
| TV licence |
Cancel or transfer |
| Phone/broadband |
Cancel or transfer |
| Mobile phone |
Cancel |
| Streaming services |
Cancel |
| Gym memberships |
Cancel |
| Magazine subscriptions |
Cancel |
Property and Vehicles
| Asset |
Action |
| Home insurance |
Inform — may need to adjust cover |
| Car insurance |
Cancel or transfer |
| Mortgage |
Notify lender |
| Rent |
Notify landlord |
| DVLA |
Register vehicle keeper change |
Finding All the Accounts
Common Places to Check
| Location |
What to Look For |
| Post |
Bank statements, bills |
| Email |
Account confirmations |
| Filing cabinet |
Financial documents |
| Safe/lockbox |
Important papers |
| Bank safe deposit |
Valuables, documents |
Asset Search Services
| Service |
What It Does |
| Unclaimed Assets Register |
Find lost accounts |
| NS&I Tracing |
Premium Bonds, savings |
| Pension Tracing Service |
Find workplace pensions |
| Insurance company search |
ABI death notification |
Probate or Letters of Administration
When You Need Probate
| Value of Estate |
Probate Required? |
| Under £5,000-10,000 |
Usually no |
| £10,000-50,000 |
Depends on institution |
| Over £50,000 |
Usually yes |
| Property involved |
Almost always yes |
Grant of Probate vs Letters of Administration
| Document |
When Used |
| Grant of Probate |
When there’s a valid will |
| Letters of Administration |
When there’s no will |
How to Apply for Probate
| Option |
Cost (2025/26) |
| Online application |
£300 (no IHT) / £215 (with IHT) |
| Paper application |
Higher fee |
| Through solicitor |
£2,000-5,000+ |
Inheritance Tax
Do You Need to Pay?
| Estate Value |
IHT Due? |
| Under £325,000 |
No |
| £325,000-£500,000 (spouse) |
Usually no — transfers to spouse |
| Over threshold |
40% on amount above threshold |
| Leaving home to children |
£500,000 threshold (residence nil rate band) |
Paying IHT Before Probate
If IHT is due:
- Must be paid within 6 months of death
- May need to pay before probate granted
- Banks can release funds for IHT payment
- Property can be sold to pay
Dealing with Debts
What Happens to Debts
| Debt Type |
Treatment |
| Sole debts |
Paid from estate assets |
| Joint debts |
Surviving person liable |
| Secured debts |
Secured asset may be sold |
| Unsecured debts |
Paid after secured debts |
| Guarantor debts |
You’re liable if you guaranteed |
Debts You Don’t Inherit
| Debt Type |
Your Liability |
| Parent’s credit card (sole) |
None personally |
| Parent’s loan (sole) |
None personally |
| Their mortgage (sole name) |
Estate liable, not you |
| Their overdraft (sole) |
Estate liable |
Order of Payment
- Funeral expenses
- Secured debts (mortgage)
- Preferred debts (employee wages)
- Unsecured debts (credit cards)
- Interest on debts
- Beneficiaries
Tax Affairs
Final Tax Return
| Situation |
Action |
| Self-employed |
File final return to date of death |
| Employed |
P45 issued by employer |
| Rental income |
Report to date of death |
| Capital gains |
Report any disposals |
Tax Refunds
| Source |
How to Claim |
| Overpaid income tax |
HMRC will calculate |
| Council tax |
May be refund due |
| Overpaid bills |
Contact providers |
Joint Assets and Accounts
Joint Bank Accounts
| Ownership |
What Happens |
| True joint |
Surviving holder owns all |
| Joint tenants |
Passes automatically |
| Tenants in common |
Share goes to estate |
Property Ownership
| Ownership Type |
What Happens |
| Joint tenants |
Survivor owns whole property |
| Tenants in common |
Deceased’s share goes to estate |
| Sole ownership |
Whole property goes to estate |
Claiming Benefits for Yourself
If You’re the Spouse/Partner
| Benefit |
Eligibility |
| Bereavement Support Payment |
Under state pension age, spouse contributed NI |
| Widowed Parent’s Allowance |
If have children |
| Funeral Expenses Payment |
On qualifying benefits |
Other Support
| Support |
Details |
| Council tax reduction |
Single person discount |
| Housing benefit |
May continue |
| Pension credit |
May be affected |
Timeline: What to Do When
Week 1
Week 2-4
Month 2-3
Month 3-6
Month 6+
Professional Help
When to Use a Solicitor
| Situation |
Recommendation |
| Simple estate, no property |
DIY possible |
| Property involved |
Consider solicitor |
| IHT due |
Strongly recommend |
| Complex will/disputes |
Essential |
| Intestacy (no will) |
Advisable |
Cost Guide
| Service |
Typical Cost |
| DIY probate |
£300-500 |
| Solicitor (simple) |
£2,000-3,000 |
| Solicitor (complex) |
£5,000+ |
| Bank executor service |
1-4% of estate |
Summary Checklist
| Priority |
Task |
| Immediate |
Register death, get certificates |
| Week 1 |
Tell Us Once, notify family |
| Week 2-4 |
Banks, insurers, utility companies |
| Month 1-2 |
Probate application, asset gathering |
| Month 3-6 |
Collect assets, pay debts |
| Month 6+ |
Distribute estate |