Probate in Palm Beach County: Where It’s Filed
Palm Beach County sits in Florida’s 15th Judicial Circuit. Probate is filed with the Palm Beach County Clerk, in the county where the decedent was domiciled at death. The Probate Division has about seven judges across its probate divisions. Attorneys e-file every document through the statewide Florida Courts E-Filing Portal, which is why an out-of-state family can have a Palm Beach County estate handled without anyone traveling to the courthouse.
We serve residents of Palm Beach County and nearby communities, including West Palm Beach, Boca Raton, Delray Beach, Boynton Beach, Jupiter, Wellington, Palm Beach Gardens.
Which Kind of Probate You’ll Need
Most Palm Beach County estates pass through one of three doors. The cheapest one may be open:
- Disposition without administration (§735.301) — tiny estates with only exempt property and final-expense reimbursement; days to weeks.
- Summary administration (§735.201) — estates of $75,000 or less after exempt property, or when the decedent died more than two years ago; often weeks.
- Formal administration (ch. 733) — everything else; a personal representative is appointed and the case runs about 6 to 12 months.
We confirm which applies at your consult, and quote a flat fee. Estimate the cost and timeline first →
How Long, and What It Costs
Formal administration is paced by the 3-month creditor-claim window (§733.702); clean distribution waits for it to pass. Florida sets a presumed-reasonable attorney fee scaled to the estate (§733.6171), but it’s a ceiling, not a mandate. Our flat fees start at $1,500 (disposition), $2,500 (summary), and $3,500 (formal). Government costs, the Palm Beach County filing fee (about $400), newspaper publication, and certified copies, are additional and passed through at cost. See the full Florida probate guide →
Out-of-State Personal Representatives
You can serve as personal representative of a Palm Beach County estate from another state if you’re related to the decedent by blood, adoption, or marriage (§733.304); an out-of-state child qualifies. We represent personal representatives across Palm Beach County remotely, by phone, video, and e-signature.
Handling a Palm Beach County estate?
A free 30-minute consult tells you which kind of probate applies and what it will cost.
Book your free consultFrequently Asked Questions
Where is probate filed in Palm Beach County?
Probate is filed with the Palm Beach County Clerk, in the 15th Judicial Circuit, where the decedent was domiciled. Attorneys e-file through the statewide Florida Courts E-Filing Portal, so you don't have to appear in person. We handle Palm Beach County estates remotely.
How long will it take?
Formal administration in any Florida county usually runs 6 to 12 months because the 3-month creditor-claim window (§733.702) must pass. Summary administration is faster, often a few weeks to about two months.
Do I need a Palm Beach County attorney if I live out of state?
You need a Florida attorney for most formal administrations (Fla. Prob. R. 5.030), but you don't need to be local. We represent personal representatives across Palm Beach County and beyond by phone, video, and e-signature.
Sources
- Fla. Stat. ch. 733–735 (administration); §733.304 (nonresident PR); §733.702 (creditor claims); Fla. Prob. R. 5.030 (attorney required). Filing via the Palm Beach County Clerk (15th Judicial Circuit) and the Florida Courts E-Filing Portal. (retrieved 2026-06-06)
Updated June 6, 2026. Reviewed by Kevin D. Klagge, Esq., Fla. Bar No. 99502. General information about Florida law, not legal advice. We serve Palm Beach County residents remotely; this is not a Palm Beach County office.