Estate Planning, Explained

What is probate — and why do so many families work to avoid it?

Probate is the court-supervised process of settling someone’s estate after they pass. It’s often slower, more public, and more expensive than families expect — arriving at the worst possible moment.

The Basics

Probate, in plain terms

When a person dies, someone has to prove their will is valid, identify and value what they owned, pay off debts and taxes, and then distribute what’s left to the right people. When that happens under court supervision, it’s called probate.

Every state runs probate a little differently, and the specifics depend on the size and complexity of the estate. But the broad shape is consistent: it takes time, it creates a public record, and it can carry costs that reduce what reaches the family.

Why it’s public: Because probate runs through the courts, the will and an inventory of the estate generally become part of the public record — meaning anyone can see what was owned and who received it.

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The Real Impact

How probate hurts a grieving family

The legal definition doesn’t capture what families actually feel. Here’s where the pain shows up:

  1. THE WAITING: Probate commonly takes many months, and complex or contested estates can stretch well beyond a year. During that time, assets can be partly frozen — while the mortgage, bills, and daily expenses keep coming.
  2. THE COST: Court fees and other settlement costs come out of the estate. That’s money that doesn’t reach the people it was meant for.
  3. THE EXPOSURE: Because it’s public, probate can invite disputes and unwanted attention at a time when a family most needs privacy and peace.
  4. THE PRESSURE TO SELL: When cash is tied up but bills are due, families are sometimes forced to sell assets — a home, a business stake, investments — quickly and at a bad time, just to create liquidity.
What Helps

Common ways families reduce or avoid probate

There are well-established legal tools families use to keep assets out of probate or to ease the process. Which (if any) is appropriate is a legal decision an attorney makes based on your situation — but in general terms, families often hear about:

  • Living trusts, which can hold assets so they pass outside probate
  • Beneficiary designations on accounts and policies
  • How property is titled and owned
  • Certain accounts that transfer directly to a named person

An attorney structures these correctly. Errors in wording or funding are exactly where plans fail — which is why this is legal work, not do-it-yourself work.

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The Question Most Parents Never Ask

Where I come in

Even a well-built, probate-avoiding plan has a gap: the family still needs accessible cash for final expenses, taxes, and the settlement period. That’s my role — helping make sure liquidity is there, generally through life insurance, so your family isn’t forced to sell assets or drain savings while everything settles.

See how life insurance creates estate liquidity →

Educational information only — not legal advice. Anil Khanchandani is a licensed insurance producer, not an attorney, and does not draft legal documents. Estate documents are prepared by licensed attorneys; through Anil’s affiliation with HGI, clients can access NetLaw’s attorney-led platform. Please consult a qualified attorney about your situation.

Common Questions

Probate FAQ

Does having a will avoid probate?
Is probate always bad?
How long does probate take?
What can I do about the cash-flow gap during probate?

Worried about leaving your family in limbo?

Let’s talk through how to keep cash accessible while your estate settles — free and no obligation.