There is a widespread belief that if you have a will, your family will not have to go through probate. This belief is wrong. A will does not prevent probate. It is simply a set of instructions that tells the probate court what you wanted. Probate still opens. The process still takes time. The fees still apply. And in Nevada, those fees can be significant.

What Probate Actually Is

Probate is the court-supervised legal process of transferring a deceased person's assets to their heirs. When someone dies owning property in their name alone — a house, a bank account, a brokerage account — that property cannot simply be handed over to heirs. The court must first verify the will (if there is one), identify and pay any debts, and then authorize the transfer to beneficiaries.

The process is not inherently corrupt or adversarial. It exists to protect creditors and to verify that transfers are legitimate. But it is slow, it costs money, and it is public — meaning your estate's contents and your beneficiaries' names become part of the public court record.

In Nevada, a typical uncontested probate case takes 12–18 months from the date of filing to final close. That is time during which your family may have limited access to estate assets.

What Probate Costs in Nevada

Attorney fees in Nevada are calculated as follows: statutory percentage of gross estate value, set by California Probate Code §§ 10810–10811. Both the attorney and the executor (personal representative) are each entitled to the same statutory fee — meaning the total cost is typically double the rates shown below.

On a $500K estate

Combined statutory attorney and executor fees on a $500,000 estate in Nevada — calculated on gross value before debts. This is before any extraordinary fee petitions, court filing costs, or appraisal fees.

Source: California Probate Code §§ 10810–10811

Note that these fees are calculated on the gross value of the estate, not the net. If you own a home worth $800,000 with a $400,000 mortgage, Nevada probate fees are calculated on the full $800,000, not the $400,000 in actual equity. On an $800,000 gross estate, combined statutory fees exceed $38,000 before any additional costs.

Nevada Specifics

Nevada's small estate affidavit threshold increased to $184,500 in 2025 (California Probate Code § 13100), adjusted for inflation every three years. This threshold applies to the total of all personal property, not real estate. Real property requires a separate simplified succession petition (§ 13150) or full probate regardless of value unless transferred by another non-probate mechanism.

The Small Estate Exception

Most states have a simplified process for smaller estates — a way to transfer assets without going through full probate. In Nevada, simplified procedures are available for estates valued under $184,500 in personal property (2025 threshold).

The simplified process in Nevada — called a small estate affidavit or summary administration — is faster and less expensive than formal probate. But it has limits: it generally does not cover real estate, it requires a 40-day waiting period after death, and it may not work if there are disputes among heirs. If your estate is close to the threshold, it is worth understanding which of your assets fall within it and which require full probate.

What Avoids Probate in Nevada

Not all assets go through probate. Assets that pass through a named beneficiary designation or a co-ownership structure bypass the probate process entirely. The most common non-probate transfer tools are:

Understanding which of your assets are and are not subject to probate in Nevada is one of the most practical things a person can do in retirement planning.

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Key Takeaways — Nevada Probate
  • A will does not avoid probate in Nevada — it runs probate with instructions.
  • Nevada probate typically takes and costs approximately in combined attorney and executor fees on a $500,000 estate.
  • Probate fees are calculated on gross asset value, not net equity — a $800K home with a $400K mortgage still generates fees on the full $800K.
  • Estates under in personal property may qualify for simplified affidavit procedures (California Probate Code § 13100).
  • Beneficiary designations, joint tenancy, TOD designations, and living trusts all bypass Nevada probate.
  • Nevada Revocable Transfer on Death Deeds (TOD deeds for real property) are available and permanent as of 2022.

Sources: California Probate Code §§ 10810–10811, 13100; File 7 — Probate: What Really Happens State by State

Educational Purposes Only. Retirement Shield is published for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute legal or financial advice. We are not a licensed attorney, registered investment advisor, or financial planner. State laws change frequently — always verify current rules with the Nevada Probate Court or a qualified estate planning attorney before making decisions based on this information. Data verified against primary sources as of March 2026.