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Last reviewed: 17 May 2026, reflects Probate Office processing data for April/May 2026.
Understanding probate times in Ireland is the single most important planning step for any executor or personal representative dealing with a deceased person’s estate. As of mid-2026, straightforward estates can reach grant of probate in roughly four to six months from the date of death, while many estates of moderate complexity take six to twelve months, and contested or high-value cases regularly stretch beyond twelve months. This guide breaks the probate process in Ireland into concrete phases, sets out what executors should be doing month by month, explains current Probate Office waiting times and covers the tax, cost and procedural questions that arise most often.
There is no single fixed duration for probate in Ireland. The total time depends on the size of the estate, the number and type of assets, whether there is a valid will, and how quickly the executor can gather documentation. According to the Courts Service of Ireland, the Dublin Probate Office currently operates a 10–12 week waiting period for personal-applicant appointments alone, before any assessment of the application takes place. Solicitor applications submitted by post follow a separate processing queue but face comparable turnaround periods.
When all phases are combined, from the date of death through to final distribution to beneficiaries, industry observers and practitioner guidance consistently report the following ranges:
These figures align with the ranges published by multiple Irish solicitor practices and referenced during the Dáil Éireann question session on probate administration workloads on 4 March 2026. The practical effect of this is that executors should plan for a minimum of six months and build contingency for delays, particularly where the Dublin Probate Office is the relevant office.
Executor action: Start gathering asset documentation immediately after the funeral. Every week saved in the early stages shortens the overall probate timeline in Ireland.
How long does probate take in Ireland when you map it month by month? The answer becomes clearer when you separate the process into five distinct phases, each with its own typical duration and set of executor tasks.
| Phase | Typical Duration | Executor Tasks |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Immediate actions (notify, funeral, secure assets) | 0–4 weeks | Locate the will; secure the deceased’s property; notify banks, insurers and Revenue; organise the funeral; list all known beneficiaries |
| 2. Asset gathering and valuations | 1–3 months | Obtain property title documents and professional valuations; request bank balance certificates; collect pension and investment statements; identify liabilities |
| 3. Application preparation and filing | 1–2 months | Complete Inland Revenue Affidavit (CA24); prepare the Oath for Executor; compile the probate inventory and schedule of assets; draft and swear the necessary affidavits |
| 4. Probate Office processing / waiting for grant | 8–12+ weeks (Dublin Apr/May 2026: 10–12 weeks for personal-applicant appointment) | Attend the Probate Office appointment (if personal applicant); respond promptly to any Probate Office queries or requisitions |
| 5. Post-grant administration | 1–6 months | Transfer or sell assets; settle outstanding debts and liabilities; distribute legacies and residuary estate; file final income tax and CAT returns |
A widow dies leaving a valid will, a family home held in her sole name, one bank account and a small credit-union savings account. No foreign assets, no disputes and no complex tax issues. Her adult son is the sole executor and sole beneficiary.
| Month | What Happens |
|---|---|
| Month 1 | Funeral arranged; will located; banks notified; death certificate obtained; property secured |
| Months 2–3 | Property valued; bank balance certificates received; Inland Revenue Affidavit prepared and sworn; solicitor files application or personal applicant books Probate Office appointment |
| Months 3–5 | Probate Office processes the application; Grant of Probate issued |
| Months 5–6 | Bank accounts closed and funds released; property transferred; CAT return filed if required |
A father dies leaving two properties (one in Dublin, one a holiday home), a share portfolio, a defined-contribution pension, a UK bank account and three adult children as beneficiaries. The will is valid but contains a specific bequest of a property to one child, creating valuation and equalisation issues.
| Month | What Happens |
|---|---|
| Month 1 | Funeral; will located; all financial institutions and Revenue notified; initial asset list compiled |
| Months 2–4 | Both properties professionally valued; share portfolio valued; UK bank contacted (may require separate UK grant); pension death-benefit claim lodged; debts identified |
| Months 4–5 | Inland Revenue Affidavit prepared; application lodged with Probate Office |
| Months 5–8 | Probate Office processes the application; queries raised and answered; Grant of Probate issued |
| Months 8–12 | Dublin property transferred; holiday home sold on the open market; share portfolio liquidated or transferred; UK funds repatriated; debts settled; CAT returns filed for each beneficiary; final distribution made |
The Probate Office processes applications strictly in order. Submitting a complete, error-free application is the only reliable way to avoid delays. Common practical steps include:
Not every asset belonging to the deceased forms part of the probate estate. Understanding this distinction is essential because it directly affects probate times in Ireland, fewer assets passing through probate means less paperwork and a shorter timeline.
Assets that typically require probate:
Assets that usually pass outside probate:
Beneficiaries often assume that a jointly held bank account automatically avoids probate. This is correct only where the account is held as joint tenants with a right of survivorship. If the account is held as tenants in common, the deceased’s share forms part of the probate estate. Similarly, pension death benefits are not guaranteed to pass outside probate, the pension scheme trustees retain discretion over who receives the lump sum, even where the member has completed an expression-of-wish form.
A Grant of Probate (where there is a will) or a Grant of Administration (where there is no will) is required whenever the deceased held assets in their sole name that cannot be released without legal authority. In practice, Irish banks and financial institutions will release small balances, typically up to a few thousand euro, on production of a death certificate and an indemnity, without requiring a formal grant. For anything above that threshold, or for property transfers, a grant is essential.
The precise threshold at which a bank insists on a grant varies between institutions. There is no single statutory small-estates exemption in Ireland equivalent to those found in some common-law jurisdictions, although the Courts Service operates a simplified procedure for personal applicants dealing with straightforward, lower-value estates. Executors should contact each institution directly to confirm its requirements.
Solicitor vs personal applicant: Executors can apply for probate personally through the Probate Office (Dublin) or a District Probate Registry, or they can instruct a solicitor to make the application. Personal applications involve an in-person appointment at the Probate Office; solicitor applications are handled by post. For estates with any degree of complexity, multiple assets, tax considerations or potential disputes, instructing a solicitor is strongly recommended.
The following checklist outlines the key steps when applying for a grant of probate in Ireland, whether through a solicitor or as a personal applicant.
One of the most common questions executors ask is: how much do solicitors charge to administer probate? The answer varies depending on estate size, complexity and the fee model used. The following ranges are indicative and drawn from publicly available guidance published by Irish solicitor practices. Executors should always request a written fee estimate before engaging a solicitor.
| Estate Type | Indicative Solicitor Fee Range | Typical Disbursements |
|---|---|---|
| Small / straightforward (under €300,000) | €2,000–€4,000 + VAT | Valuations, Probate Office fees, Commissioner for Oaths, certified copies |
| Medium (€300,000–€1,000,000) | €3,500–€7,000 + VAT (or 1–2% of estate value) | As above, plus potential auctioneer fees if property is sold |
| Large / complex (over €1,000,000 or involving foreign assets / disputes) | €7,000–€15,000+ VAT (or agreed percentage) | As above, plus specialist tax advice, foreign legal fees, litigation costs if disputed |
Disbursements, costs payable to third parties, are charged on top of solicitor fees. These typically include Probate Office filing fees, property valuation fees, Commissioner for Oaths fees, postage and certified-copy charges. For a standard estate, disbursements usually total between €500 and €1,500.
Some solicitors offer fixed-fee packages for straightforward estates, while others charge on an hourly basis or as a percentage of the gross estate value. The key is to agree the fee structure in writing before work begins.
Capital Acquisitions Tax (CAT) is the tax that beneficiaries, not the estate itself, are liable to pay on inheritances above certain thresholds. However, the executor has a practical responsibility to ensure that CAT obligations are flagged and, in some cases, to file returns on behalf of beneficiaries.
The CAT group thresholds determine how much a beneficiary can receive tax-free, depending on their relationship to the deceased. Budget 2026 left these thresholds unchanged, meaning the existing group limits continue to apply to inheritances taken in 2026. Executors should direct beneficiaries to the Revenue Commissioners’ published guidance for the current threshold figures and rates.
Practical CAT compliance checklist for executors:
Ireland does not have a formal statutory small-estates exemption that automatically dispenses with the need for a grant. However, in practice, many financial institutions will release funds from low-value sole accounts upon receipt of a death certificate, the original will and a signed indemnity, without requiring a formal Grant of Probate.
The Probate Office also provides a streamlined process for personal applicants dealing with relatively simple estates. This involves attending the Probate Office in person, where staff guide the applicant through the paperwork. It is not a separate legal procedure but rather a simplified route within the standard probate process.
Should you apply for a grant? If the estate includes any property, assets held solely above institutional release thresholds, or if any institution refuses to release funds without a grant, then a formal application is necessary. When in doubt, seek professional advice, the cost of a short consultation is modest compared to the risk of improper administration.
Disputes over the validity of a will, the identity of beneficiaries or the actions of an executor can significantly extend probate times in Ireland. If a dispute arises, the executor should seek legal advice immediately rather than attempting to resolve the matter informally.
Common dispute scenarios include challenges to the validity of the will (undue influence, lack of testamentary capacity), claims by a spouse or child under Section 117 of the Succession Act 1965, and disagreements among beneficiaries about asset distribution. Section 117 claims must generally be brought within six months of the first taking out of a Grant of Representation.
Alternative dispute resolution, particularly mediation, can resolve many inheritance disputes faster and at lower cost than litigation. Where court proceedings are unavoidable, the executor should ensure that estate funds are ring-fenced to cover legal costs and that all beneficiaries are kept informed of progress.
Understanding realistic probate times in Ireland empowers executors to plan effectively, manage beneficiary expectations and avoid the most common delays. Start gathering documentation within the first week, obtain professional valuations early, and submit a complete, accurate application to the Probate Office. For estates of any complexity, professional legal guidance shortens the timeline and reduces risk. If you need assistance navigating the probate process in Ireland, or would like to be connected with an experienced estate administration solicitor, you can find an estate administration lawyer in Ireland through the Global Law Experts directory.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Helen McGrath at O’Connor LLP, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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