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Probate in Rhode Island

Settling an estate in Rhode Island: do you need probate, what it costs, and how long.

Probate is the court process that gives someone legal authority to settle an estate. Whether you need the full version, and what it costs, depends on Rhode Island's own rules. Here's where you stand.

Do you need full probate in Rhode Island?

Rhode Island's small-estate limit is about $15,000. Estates at or under it can usually use a faster, simpler process instead of full probate.

You also skip probate for anything set up to pass directly: accounts with a named beneficiary, retirement and life insurance, jointly owned property, and anything in a living trust.

What probate costs in Rhode Island

Rhode Island does not publish a simple statutory fee schedule, so cost is mainly court filing fees plus any attorney's reasonable fee.

Qualifying for Rhode Island's small-estate process is the single biggest way to cut cost and time, which is why it's worth checking first.

How long it takes

Most estates settle in six to twelve months. The unavoidable waits are the creditor-claim window and the court's own schedule; you can avoid self-inflicted delays by opening the estate promptly and keeping clean records.

See exactly what applies to your estate.

Answer five quick questions and we'll tell you whether this Rhode Island estate needs probate and the first thing to do.

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Common questions about probate in Rhode Island

What is the small estate limit in Rhode Island?

About $15,000. Estates at or under it can often skip full probate.

How long does probate take in Rhode Island?

Most estates take about six to twelve months. Simple ones can be faster; contested or complex ones can run longer, largely because of the creditor-claim window and the court's calendar.

Do I need a lawyer for probate in Rhode Island?

Often no, for a straightforward or small estate. A lawyer is worth it if the estate may owe more than it's worth, there's a dispute, or there are complex taxes.

Educational information, not legal advice. Figures are verified as of 2026 and can change; confirm current limits with the Rhode Island probate court.