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.

Dealing with finances after someone dies can feel overwhelming. This checklist guides you through each step in order.

Immediate Priorities (First Week)

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

  1. Registrar provides your Tell Us Once reference
  2. Use online at gov.uk or call
  3. Complete within 28 days of registration
  4. 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

  1. Funeral expenses
  2. Secured debts (mortgage)
  3. Preferred debts (employee wages)
  4. Unsecured debts (credit cards)
  5. Interest on debts
  6. 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

  • Register death
  • Order death certificates (10+)
  • Secure property
  • Locate will
  • Use Tell Us Once
  • Notify employer

Week 2-4

  • Contact all banks
  • Notify insurers
  • Cancel direct debits (unnecessary ones)
  • Notify pension providers
  • Contact mortgage lender
  • Apply for probate (if straightforward)

Month 2-3

  • Gather asset information
  • Calculate estate value
  • Pay inheritance tax (if due)
  • Receive grant of probate
  • Begin collecting assets

Month 3-6

  • Sell property (if applicable)
  • Collect all assets
  • Pay debts from estate
  • File final tax return

Month 6+

  • Distribute to beneficiaries
  • File estate accounts
  • Keep records for 12 years

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