Kindred
Washington probate · Small estate affidavit

Washington small estate affidavit: limits & how it works

Washington's small-estate affidavit lets a beneficiary collect personal and real property without probate when the estate is $100,000 or less.

WA small-estate limit

$100,000

Common questions

Do I need a lawyer for probate in Washington?

No — Washington's informal probate under the Uniform Probate Code is designed to be handled by the personal representative without an attorney. 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 Washington?

No statutory percentage fee — attorneys typically bill $250-$400/hour or a flat fee. Filing fees run about $230-$250. Estates under $100,000 can use a small-estate affidavit. These are illustrative figures.

How long does probate take in Washington?

An informal probate typically runs 6 to 12 months. Creditors have 4 months from publication of notice to file claims.

More on Washington probate

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.

Prefer to talk? (346) 396-2500

Tell us about your situation

Has the person passed away?

Your relationship to them

Talk to a coordinator