Dying without a will in Ohio: intestate succession & what happens
With no will, Ohio's intestate succession statute (R.C. § 2105.06) determines who inherits, and the court appoints an administrator. A release from administration may still be available for smaller estates. Kindred handles the administration and coordinates the attorney.
- With no will, Ohio's intestate succession statute (R.C. § 2105.06) determines who inherits, and the court appoints an administrator. A release from administration may still be available for smaller estates. Kindred handles the administration and coordinates the attorney.
- Ohio requires an attorney for formal probate — Kindred handles the administration and coordinates a fixed-price attorney.
- The court appoints an administrator (instead of an executor) when there is no will naming one.
- Small-estate simplified procedures may still be available even without a will.
Common questions
Do I need a lawyer for probate in Ohio?
Generally yes — in Ohio, a fiduciary opening a formal estate is expected to act through a licensed attorney, because the fiduciary represents the estate's interests. Kindred handles all the administrative work and coordinates a fixed-price attorney for the legal filing. For very small estates that qualify for release from administration, the process is simplified. Kindred is not a law firm.
How much does probate cost in Ohio?
Ohio has no statutory percentage fee — attorneys typically bill $200-$350/hour or a flat fee. Court filing fees run about $200-$350. A release from administration (for estates under $45,000/$35,000) can skip most of the formal process and reduce costs significantly. These are illustrative figures.
How long does probate take in Ohio?
A formal probate typically runs 9 to 15 months because creditors have 6 months to file claims. A release from administration can resolve in weeks for qualifying estates. Ohio also requires publication of notice to creditors, which runs on a set schedule.
What is release from administration in Ohio?
It's Ohio's simplified probate path. If the estate is $45,000 or less (surviving spouse) or $35,000 or less (other beneficiaries), the probate court can release assets without full administration — much faster and cheaper. For very small estates ($5,000/$2,000), a 'summary release' requires almost no court process at all.
Last verified June 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.
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