Estate Planning UK 2026 — Wills, LPA, Probate and Inheritance Tax Guide

Executor Duties UK — Complete Guide for Administering an Estate

Everything you need to know about being an executor in the UK. Duties, responsibilities, the probate process, timeline, and common challenges.

If you are planning wills, attorney roles, probate steps, and family handover tasks together, use the Estate Planning Hub for the full route map.

Being an executor is an important responsibility. Here’s what’s involved and how to do it properly.

Understanding the Role

What an Executor Does

ResponsibilityDetails
Arrange funeralAccording to wishes
Secure propertyProtect estate assets
Value assetsFor probate and tax
Apply for probateLegal authority to act
Pay debtsOf the deceased
Pay taxesInheritance tax, income tax
Distribute estateAccording to will
Keep recordsOf all transactions
AspectDetails
Personal liabilityMistakes can be costly
Fiduciary dutyAct in beneficiaries’ interests
Duty to accountRecord everything
Duty of careAct reasonably

Can You Refuse?

DecisionImplication
RenounceBefore any action taken
Once intermeddledCan’t easily withdraw
Power reservedOther executors act
Appoint solicitorsTo do work for you

Initial Steps After Death

First Few Days

TaskDetails
Register deathWithin 5 days
Arrange funeralAccording to wishes
Secure propertyEmpty house, redirect post
Find willOriginal document
Notify relevant partiesBank, utilities

Immediate Notifications

Who to TellWhy
BanksFreeze accounts
EmployerOutstanding pay, benefits
HMRCTax affairs
Benefits agenciesDWP, council
Pension providersDeath benefits
Insurance companiesLife insurance claims

Securing Assets

TaskPurpose
Change locks (if needed)Security
Redirect postCatch correspondence
Inventory valuablesKnow what exists
Maintain insuranceProperty covered
Stop direct debitsNon-essential ones

Valuing the Estate

What to Include

Asset TypeExamples
PropertyHouse, land
Bank accountsAll accounts
InvestmentsShares, ISAs, bonds
PensionsDeath benefits, lump sums
Personal possessionsValuables, cars
Business interestsShares, ownership

How to Value

AssetMethod
PropertyEstate agent valuation or surveyor
Bank accountsStatement at date of death
SharesStock exchange value on date
Personal effectsReasonable estimate
ValuablesProfessional valuation
PensionsScheme administrator info

Debts and Liabilities

IncludeExamples
MortgageOutstanding balance
LoansPersonal loans, credit cards
Utility billsOutstanding amounts
Funeral costsYour estimate/quote
Tax owedIncome tax, CGT

Applying for Probate

When Probate Is Needed

RequiredNot Usually Required
Property to sell/transferSmall bank accounts
Access to accounts over £5,000-£50,000Joint assets passing to survivor
Complex investmentsAssets held in trust

The Application

StepDetails
Complete formsPA1P (with will) or PA1A
Submit online or by postGov.uk or local registry
Pay feesBased on estate value
Submit willOriginal document
Swear oathStatement of truth
Receive grantUsually 4-8 weeks

Probate Fees

Estate ValueFee
Under £5,000None
Over £5,000£273 application
Extra copies£1.50 each (get several)

Inheritance Tax

When IHT Is Due

ThresholdDetails
Nil-rate band£325,000 tax-free
Residence nil-rate bandExtra £175,000 for family home
Surviving spouseFull exemption
IHT rate40% above threshold

Paying IHT

RequirementDetails
Pay before probateAt least some of it
Due within 6 monthsOf end of death month
Interest accruesIf late
Can sometimes pay from estateBefore probate

IHT Forms

FormWhen
IHT205Excepted estate (no tax)
IHT400Full return required
IHT421Summary for probate

Administrative Tasks

Managing the Estate

TaskFrequency
Pay ongoing billsAs needed
Manage propertyUntil sold/transferred
File tax returnsAs required
Respond to creditorsWithin 2 months advertising
Keep beneficiaries informedRegular updates

Advertising for Creditors

StepPurpose
Notice in GazetteFormal advertisement
Local newspaperWhere property held
Wait 2 monthsFor claims
ProtectionFrom unknown creditors

Tax Returns

ReturnDeadline
Final income taxTo date of death
Estate income taxOn estate income
Capital gains taxIf assets sold

Distributing the Estate

Order of Payment

PriorityWhat
1Funeral expenses
2Testamentary expenses (probate costs)
3Secured creditors (mortgage)
4Preferred debts
5Unsecured creditors
6Beneficiaries

Before Distributing

CheckDone
All debts identified
Creditor advertisement period passed
Tax clearance obtained
Inheritance Act 6 months
No pending claims

Receipts and Records

RequirementWhy
Get receiptsFrom all beneficiaries
Keep recordsFor any queries
Final accountsShow all transactions
Retain for 12+ yearsPossible future queries

Common Challenges

What Can Go Wrong

ChallengeHow to Handle
Missing willSearch thoroughly
Family disputesRemain neutral
Insolvent estateFollow priority rules
Missing beneficiariesProfessional tracer
Contested willSeek legal advice

Executor Disputes

If Multiple ExecutorsOptions
DisagreeCompromise or court
One won’t actApply to remove
DelaysBeneficiaries can apply to court

Protecting Yourself

ProtectionHow
Creditor advertisementGazette and newspaper
Keep recordsEvery decision documented
Professional adviceFor complex matters
InsuranceExecutor indemnity

Getting Help

When to Use Professionals

SituationProfessional Help
Complex estateSolicitor
IHT planningTax adviser
Property saleEstate agent, conveyancer
DisputesSolicitor
OverwhelmedProbate specialist

Costs of Professional Help

ServiceTypical Cost
Solicitor (full administration)1-4% of estate
Probate only service£500-£2,000
Accountant (tax returns)£200-£500
DIY with guidance£500-£1,000

Summary: Executor Checklist

First Steps

TaskDone
Locate will
Register death
Arrange funeral
Secure property
Notify banks/institutions

Probate Application

TaskDone
Value all assets
Value all debts
Complete IHT forms
Pay IHT (if due)
Apply for probate
Receive grant

Administration

TaskDone
Place creditor advertisements
Collect assets
Pay debts
File tax returns
Wait 6 months (Inheritance Act)

Distribution

TaskDone
Obtain tax clearance
Prepare final accounts
Distribute to beneficiaries
Get receipts
Keep records

Key Contacts

ServiceContact
Probate Registrygov.uk/probate
HMRC Bereavement0300 200 3300
Tell Us OnceRegister death service
STEP membersSTEP.org (solicitors)

Being an executor is a significant responsibility that can take considerable time. Don’t be afraid to get professional help if the estate is complex or you feel overwhelmed — the estate can pay for reasonable professional fees.

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Sources

  1. MoneyHelper — Everyday money