Kindred
New Hampshire probate

Probate in New Hampshire, handled for you

New Hampshire settles estates through the Probate Court (part of the Circuit Court system). New Hampshire does not strictly require an attorney for an ordinary, uncontested probate. A small-estate affidavit is available for estates under $25,000. Kindred handles the administration for one flat fee.

New Hampshire lets you handle an uncontested probate without a lawyer. New Hampshire does not strictly require an attorney for an ordinary, uncontested probate. Kindred handles the administrative work; if anything is contested, we flag it so you can bring in an attorney of your choosing.

New Hampshire probate at a glance

The four things families ask first

New Hampshire cost estimate

What it could cost in New Hampshire

$500,000
$50k$3M+
Full-service firm (handles it all)$14,500

45 hours of admin and legal work, all billed at lawyer rates.

Kindred + your attorney

Kindred admin (flat)$5,500
Independent attorney — still required$3,500
Combined total$9,000

Estimated difference vs. a full-service firm

$5,500

+ about 150 hours of your own time

Full-service estimated at $250–$400/hr for ~45hours; the attorney figure is an illustrative fixed fee. Illustrative only — not a quote or legal advice. Figures vary by estate. We're not a law firm; an independent attorney always handles the legal work.

New Hampshire probate questions

Frequently asked

Do I need a lawyer for probate in New Hampshire?

Not strictly — New Hampshire does not require an attorney for an ordinary, uncontested probate. Kindred handles the administrative work for a flat fee. If a dispute arises, we flag it so you can bring in an attorney of your choosing. Kindred is not a law firm.

How much does probate cost in New Hampshire?

No statutory percentage fee — attorneys typically bill $250-$400/hour or a flat fee. Filing fees run about $150-$250+. Estates under $25,000 can use a small-estate affidavit. These are illustrative figures.

How long does probate take in New Hampshire?

Typically 8 to 14 months. Creditors have 6 months from publication of notice to file claims. An inventory is due within 90 days of appointment.

Last verified July 2026. Figures are illustrative and vary by estate — not a quote or legal advice. Kindred is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice; we handle the administrative work and coordinate an independent attorney where one is legally required.

You don't have to carry this alone.

Tell us about the estate on a free, no-obligation call. We'll map out exactly what needs to happen — and how we'd take it off your plate.

Start with fixed-fee Estate Setup, then choose the right package.

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