Understanding Probate: What Families Should Know Before a Crisis Occurs
May 18, 2026

Learn how probate works, why estate administration matters, and how wills, trusts, and beneficiary designations affect the transfer of assets.
Understanding Probate: What Families Should Know Before a Crisis Occurs
Probate is one of the most misunderstood parts of estate planning.
Many families hear the term only after the death of a loved one — often during an already stressful and emotional period.
Understanding how probate works ahead of time can help families prepare more thoughtfully and reduce confusion when important decisions must be made quickly.
During a recent estate planning webinar, attorney and wealth advisor Neel Shah explained how probate fits into the broader estate planning process and why proactive planning can make estate administration more manageable.
What Is Probate?
Probate is the legal process used to validate a will and authorize someone to administer an estate.
After a person passes away, the executor named in the will typically submits the will to the county court. Once appointed, the executor receives authority to:
- Gather assets
- Access financial accounts
- Pay debts and expenses
- Coordinate tax filings
- Distribute inheritances
Without probate authority, many financial institutions will not allow someone to access or transfer assets solely based on a copy of a will.
Probate Is a Public Process
One important detail many families overlook is that probate is generally public.
Once filed with the court, wills and certain estate administration records may become accessible as public documents.
For some families, this may not create concern. Others may prefer additional privacy around:
- Asset distribution
- Family relationships
- Charitable intentions
- Beneficiary information
Privacy preferences often become one factor in deciding whether trust planning may be appropriate.
Probate Can Involve Significant Administrative Work
Even when probate proceeds smoothly, the process can involve substantial coordination.
Executors may need to communicate with:
- Banks
- Investment firms
- Insurance companies
- Real estate professionals
- Tax advisors
- Government agencies
The complexity often increases when someone owns multiple accounts, property in multiple states, or incomplete beneficiary designations.
Consolidating accounts and maintaining organized records can make estate administration easier regardless of whether a family uses a will-based or trust-based plan.
How Trusts May Help Streamline Administration
A revocable living trust is often used to help reduce probate-related administration.
Instead of waiting for court appointment, successor trustees may already have authority to manage trust-owned assets according to the trust instructions.
Trusts can also provide:
- Greater privacy
- Faster asset management transitions
- Structured inheritance provisions
- Multigenerational planning flexibility
However, creating a trust alone is not enough.
Assets must be properly aligned with the trust through account titling, deeds, and beneficiary coordination. Failing to complete this step can undermine the effectiveness of the plan.
Beneficiary Designations Still Matter
Even when families create trusts, beneficiary designations remain critically important.
Retirement accounts and life insurance policies often transfer according to contractual beneficiary forms rather than instructions inside a will.
Reviewing beneficiary designations regularly can help avoid unintended outcomes.
Planning Before a Crisis Creates More Flexibility
Estate planning decisions are often easier when made proactively rather than during a medical emergency or family crisis.
Families who prepare in advance may have more time to:
- Clarify decision-making roles
- Coordinate professional advisors
- Review tax implications
- Discuss family expectations
- Organize important records
Educational planning conversations can also help family members understand responsibilities before they are unexpectedly asked to serve as executors, trustees, or healthcare agents.
Readers interested in hearing the full educational discussion can access the original webinar here: https://youtu.be/GQQGZBrGZPQ
Probate is not inherently good or bad.
For some families, a will-based plan may be entirely appropriate. For others, trust planning may help simplify administration and create additional flexibility.
The most important step is often starting the conversation early and ensuring that legal documents, beneficiary designations, and financial structures are coordinated intentionally.
This blog was developed with the assistance of AI-based tools for research, drafting and editing support (ChatGPT), and reviewed by OMNI 360 personnel for accuracy and relevance. The information provided is educational and general in nature and is not intended to be, nor should it be construed as, specific investment, tax, or legal advice.