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

How Long Does Probate Take UK?

Probate timeline explained. How long to get a Grant of Probate, factors that cause delays, and how to speed up the process.

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

Probate can feel slow, but understanding the timeline helps manage expectations.

Typical Timeline

Overall Process

StageTypical Time
Gathering information2-8 weeks
Preparing application1-2 weeks
Waiting for grant4-8 weeks
Collecting assets2-4 weeks
Paying debts2-4 weeks
Distributing estate2-4 weeks
Total (straightforward)4-6 months
Total (complex)12-24+ months

Getting the Grant

WhatGrant of Probate Timeline
Application submittedWeek 0
HMRC processing (if IHT)2-4 weeks
Probate registry processing4-8 weeks
Grant receivedWeek 6-12

Factors Affecting Timeline

Makes It Faster

FactorImpact
Simple assetsFaster to value
Clear willNo disputes
No Inheritance TaxSkip IHT process
UK assets onlyNo overseas complications
Organised paperworkLess searching
Single executorQuicker decisions

Causes Delays

FactorPotential Delay
Inheritance Tax dueAdd 4-8 weeks
Missing documentsWeeks to locate
Complex assetsWeeks to value
HMRC queriesWeeks to months
Will disputesMonths to years
Overseas assetsMonths extra
Multiple executors disagreeingSignificant delays
Beneficiaries can’t be foundMust advertise

Stage by Stage

1. Before Application

TaskTime
Get death certificate1-2 weeks
Locate willDays to weeks
Identify assets2-4 weeks
Get valuations2-4 weeks
Calculate Inheritance Tax1-4 weeks

2. Submitting Application

TaskTime
Complete forms1-2 hours (online)
Pay feeSame day
Submit oathIf required

3. Waiting Period

If No IHTTimeline
Application processed4-8 weeks
Grant issuedPosted to you
If IHT DueTimeline
Pay IHT firstBefore or with application
HMRC processes2-4 weeks
Then registry processes4-8 weeks
Grant issuedAfter clearance

4. After Grant Received

TaskTime
Send grant to banks1-2 weeks
Close accounts2-4 weeks
Sell property (if needed)3-6 months
Pay debts2-4 weeks
Distribute to beneficiaries2-4 weeks

When Probate Isn’t Needed

Assets That Pass Without Probate

AssetWhat Happens
Joint bank accountsPass to survivor
Joint property (joint tenants)Pass to survivor
Life insurance in trustPaid direct to beneficiary
Pension death benefitsPaid direct to nominee
Small bank balancesReleased without probate

Small Estate Thresholds

InstitutionTypical Threshold
Banks (varies)£5,000-£50,000
Building societies£5,000-£15,000
NS&I£5,000
Premium Bonds£5,000
Check each oneThresholds vary

No Property and Small Assets

If Estate HasProbate Likely Needed?
No property, under thresholdsProbably not
Property in joint names (joint tenants)Probably not
Any property in sole nameYes
Large bank balancesYes
Shares/investmentsUsually yes

Inheritance Tax Impact

No IHT Due

SituationProcess
Estate under £325,000No IHT
Spouse inherits allUsually no IHT
Charity inheritanceReduces estate
Residence nil-rate bandUp to £500,000 more

IHT Due

Timeline ImpactDetails
Calculate taxMust be done first
Pay before grantOr arrange with HMRC
Payment optionsBank loan, direct payment scheme
HMRC clearanceAdds weeks

How to Speed Things Up

Preparation

ActionBenefit
Organise documentsFaster application
Value assets promptlyNo waiting
Use online applicationFaster than post
Pay IHT quicklyRemoves bottleneck

During Process

ActionBenefit
Respond to queries quicklyNo delays
Chase institutionsKeep things moving
Use probate solicitorExpertise helps
Consider specialist if complexWorth the fee

Common Speedbumps

IssueSolution
Banks slow to respondSend grant copies, follow up
Can’t find documentsSearch thoroughly, request copies
Beneficiaries unreachableAdvertise (legal requirement)
Property won’t sellMay need to wait

Complex Situations

Will Disputes (Contentious Probate)

ImpactDetails
Caveat lodgedStops grant being issued
Court processMonths to years
CostsSignificant legal fees
Common disputesValidity, interpretation, claims

Overseas Assets

ComplicationImpact
Different lawsEach country’s process
May need separate grantsIn each jurisdiction
TimeAdds months
CostProfessional fees

Business Assets

IssueImpact
Valuation complexTakes longer
Succession planningMay need business sale
Tax implicationsHMRC scrutiny

Professional Help

When to Use a Solicitor

SituationConsider Professional Help
Simple, clear estateDIY may be fine
Complex assetsSolicitor helpful
Inheritance Tax dueUsually advisable
Will disputes possibleEssential
Overseas elementsEssential
Unsure of anythingGet advice

Costs

ServiceTypical Cost
DIY (probate fee only)£300
Bank’s probate service1-4% of estate
Solicitor (fixed fee)£1,500-£5,000
Solicitor (% of estate)1-2%
Complex estatesHigher

Summary: Probate Timeline

Typical Timeline

StageDuration
Pre-application2-8 weeks
Waiting for grant4-8 weeks
Collecting assets2-4 weeks
Distribution2-4 weeks
Simple total4-6 months
Complex total12-24+ months

What Causes Delays

FactorCheck
Inheritance Tax due
Complex assets
Missing documents
Overseas elements
Potential disputes

Speed It Up

ActionDone
Gather documents early
Get valuations promptly
Apply online
Pay IHT if due
Respond to queries quickly
Follow up with institutions

Key Resources

ResourceFor
Gov.uk/probateApplication, guidance
Citizens AdviceFree help
Probate registryQueries
Step UKSolicitors directory

Probate is often quicker than people fear — straightforward estates can be resolved in a few months. But complex situations take longer. The key is preparation: gather information early, understand what’s involved, and don’t hesitate to get professional help if the estate is complicated.

You Might Also Find Useful

Sources

  1. GOV.UK — Making a will