Being named executor in a loved one’s will is both an honor and a serious legal obligation. If the person who died lived in Rochester or anywhere in Monroe County — from the East Avenue historic district to Park Avenue, Brighton, Irondequoit, or Greece — the estate will be administered through the Monroe County Surrogate’s Court. As executor, you become a fiduciary, which means New York law holds you personally accountable for handling the estate honestly, prudently, and in line with the Surrogate’s Court Procedure Act (SCPA) and the Estates, Powers and Trusts Law (EPTL).
This guide walks through exactly what an executor in Rochester must do, in the order it usually happens, and explains where the Monroe County Surrogate’s Court fits into each step. For a broader look at how probate works statewide, see our probate overview; for a deeper tour of the court itself, see our Surrogate’s Court guide.
What Is an Executor — and When Does Your Authority Begin?
A common misunderstanding is that being named executor in the will gives you immediate power to act. It does not. In New York, your legal authority begins only when the Monroe County Surrogate’s Court issues Letters Testamentary under SCPA §1414. Until those Letters are signed by the Surrogate or the Chief Clerk, you cannot lawfully sell estate property, access most accounts, or distribute anything.
Letters Testamentary are the court’s official certification that the will is valid and that you are the person authorized to act for the estate. Banks in Rochester, brokerage firms, and title companies will ask to see certified copies before they release funds or recognize your signature.
If urgent matters cannot wait for the full probate decree — for example, a Monroe County property that needs to be secured or a business that must keep running — the court can grant Preliminary Letters Testamentary under SCPA §1412. These give the named executor limited, interim authority while the probate petition is still pending.
Step-by-Step: The Executor’s Path Through Monroe County Surrogate’s Court
The probate process in Rochester follows a defined sequence. Here is how the duties unfold.
1. File the Probate Petition
Your first formal act is filing a Petition for Probate with the Monroe County Surrogate’s Court, along with:
- The original signed will (a photocopy is generally not accepted to admit a will to probate)
- A certified death certificate
- Supporting affidavits and the names and addresses of all distributees (the people who would inherit under New York law if there were no will)
The court charges a filing fee that is graduated by the estate’s value under SCPA §2402. Because that fee changes with estate size, you should confirm the exact amount with the court or your attorney rather than relying on a flat figure.
2. Give Notice to Distributees
The court must have jurisdiction over everyone who has a legal interest in the estate. This is accomplished in one of two ways:
- Waiver and Consent — distributees voluntarily sign documents agreeing to the will and to your appointment, which speeds everything up; or
- Citation — when someone will not sign, the court issues a citation directing them to appear on a return date and state any objection.
In an uncontested Rochester estate, most families resolve this with signed waivers, avoiding a contested hearing entirely.
3. Obtain the Decree and Letters
If no one files a valid objection by the return date, the Surrogate signs a decree admitting the will to probate, and Letters Testamentary are issued to you. This is the moment your real work as executor begins.
4. Marshal the Assets
You must locate, secure, and take control of all estate property. For a typical Monroe County estate this can include:
- Bank and credit union accounts (many Rochester families bank with ESL or local branches)
- Real property, such as a home in the South Wedge, Pittsford, or Webster
- Investment and retirement accounts
- Vehicles, personal property, and any business interests
You should open an estate bank account, retitle assets into the estate’s name where required, and keep meticulous records of every dollar in and out.
5. Pay Valid Debts, Expenses, and Taxes
Before any beneficiary receives a distribution, the executor must pay the estate’s legitimate obligations — funeral expenses, final medical bills, outstanding debts, and taxes. This includes filing the decedent’s final income tax returns and, where the estate is large enough, any New York estate tax return (more on the 2026 thresholds below).
6. Distribute and Account
Once debts and taxes are satisfied, you distribute the remaining assets to the beneficiaries named in the will. You then provide an accounting — either an informal accounting that beneficiaries approve and release, or, where disputes exist, a formal judicial accounting filed with the Monroe County Surrogate’s Court.
Executor Duties at a Glance
| Duty | What It Involves | Key NY Authority |
|---|---|---|
| Establish authority | File petition; obtain Letters Testamentary | SCPA §1414 |
| Interim authority (if urgent) | Request Preliminary Letters while probate pending | SCPA §1412 |
| Secure jurisdiction | Obtain waivers/consents or serve citation | SCPA practice |
| Pay court filing fee | Graduated by estate value | SCPA §2402 |
| Marshal assets | Locate, secure, retitle, open estate account | Fiduciary duty (EPTL) |
| Pay debts & taxes | Settle obligations before distributing | SCPA/EPTL |
| Distribute | Pay beneficiaries per the will | EPTL |
| Account | Informal release or formal judicial accounting | SCPA |
How Long Does It Take, and What Does It Cost?
For an uncontested Rochester estate, probate commonly takes about three to six months from filing to the issuance of Letters — though larger estates, tax filings, or selling real property can extend the timeline considerably.
Attorney’s fees for guiding an executor through probate typically range from about $3,000 to $10,000, depending on the complexity of the estate, whether real property is involved, and whether any disputes arise. The court’s own filing fee is graduated under SCPA §2402 and should be confirmed directly with the Monroe County Surrogate’s Court.
If the will is challenged — for instance, by a disinherited heir alleging undue influence or lack of capacity — costs and timelines rise substantially. See our page on contested probate if you anticipate objections.
When Full Probate May Not Be Necessary
Not every Rochester estate requires the full executor-and-Letters process. If the decedent’s personal property is modest, the estate may qualify for voluntary administration under SCPA Article 13. This streamlined “small estate” procedure uses an affidavit instead of a full probate proceeding, and a voluntary administrator handles the assets.
Two important caveats: real property is generally excluded from the Article 13 procedure, and the dollar limit is set by statute, so you should confirm current eligibility before relying on it. Our small estate affidavit page explains who qualifies and how to file in Monroe County.
New York Estate Tax in 2026 — What Executors Must Watch
Part of your job is determining whether the estate owes New York estate tax. For 2026, the New York basic exclusion amount is $7,350,000. Estates below that figure generally owe no New York estate tax.
New York also imposes a notorious “cliff.” If a taxable estate exceeds 105% of the exclusion — $7,717,500 in 2026 — the exclusion phases out entirely and the whole estate becomes taxable, not just the amount over the threshold. For estates near that line, careful valuation and timely filing are essential, and you should not estimate this on your own. Confirm current figures with the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance and your attorney.
Common Executor Mistakes to Avoid
- Acting before Letters issue. You have no authority until the court signs Letters Testamentary (SCPA §1414).
- Commingling funds. Never mix estate money with your own — always use a dedicated estate account.
- Distributing too early. Pay debts and taxes first; a premature distribution can leave you personally liable to creditors.
- Poor recordkeeping. Every receipt and disbursement should be documented for the accounting.
- Ignoring deadlines. Tax filings and citation return dates are firm; missing them creates problems.
Because the executor is a fiduciary, mistakes can expose you to personal liability. Working with experienced counsel protects both the estate and you.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I have to serve as executor if I’m named in the will?
No. Being named in the will does not obligate you to serve. You may decline (renounce) the appointment, in which case the Monroe County Surrogate’s Court will look to any alternate executor named in the will or appoint an administrator according to New York law.
Can I act as executor immediately after the death?
Generally no. Your authority begins only when the court issues Letters Testamentary under SCPA §1414. If something genuinely cannot wait, the court may grant Preliminary Letters Testamentary under SCPA §1412 for interim authority while probate is pending.
How long does probate take in Monroe County?
An uncontested estate often takes about three to six months from filing to issuance of Letters. Estates with real property to sell, estate tax filings, or any objections take longer.
What is the filing fee at the Monroe County Surrogate’s Court?
The court’s filing fee is graduated by the value of the estate under SCPA §2402. Because it varies with estate size, confirm the exact amount with the court or your attorney rather than relying on a single number.
Does every estate have to go through full probate?
No. Smaller estates may qualify for voluntary administration under SCPA Article 13, which uses an affidavit instead of full probate. Real property is generally excluded, so confirm eligibility before relying on it.
Talk to a New York Probate Attorney
Serving as executor in Rochester does not have to be overwhelming. Russel Morgan, Esq., and the team at Morgan Legal Group guide executors through every stage of Monroe County Surrogate’s Court — from filing the petition to obtaining Letters Testamentary, handling estate tax questions, and completing a clean final accounting.
Schedule a 30-minute consultation with Russel Morgan, Esq. to map out your duties and protect yourself from personal liability.
You can also review related guides on this site: Probate Overview, Surrogate’s Court Guide, Small Estate Affidavit, and Contested Probate. For official court information, visit the New York State Unified Court System and the New York State Senate’s SCPA text.
Further reading from Morgan Legal Group: what to ask a probate lawyer before hiring.