Probate Lawyer Port St. Lucie, Florida

Quick Answers on Port St. Lucie Probate

  • Port St. Lucie probate cases are filed with the St. Lucie County Clerk of Court and heard in the 19th Judicial Circuit Court at the Fort Pierce Courthouse.
  • Summary administration: 4 to 8 weeks. Available when the non-exempt estate is under $75,000 OR the decedent has been dead more than two years.
  • Formal administration: 6 to 12 months for an uncontested estate.
  • Florida has no state estate tax. Federal estate tax only applies above the federal exemption.
  • Out-of-state personal representatives must be qualifying close family under Florida Statute 733.304, or serve alongside a Florida resident co-PR. Common in Port St. Lucie given the large snowbird population.
  • Creditor claim deadline: 90 days from publication of Notice to Creditors, or 30 days from direct service if known. Whichever is later.
  • Florida homestead passes outside of probate to a protected class of heirs under the Florida Constitution, regardless of what the will says.

Schedule a Probate Consultation

Free initial consultation. We handle Port St. Lucie probate cases from petition through final distribution, including out-of-state estates and contested matters. Most communication happens remotely.

How does probate work in Port St. Lucie?

Port St. Lucie probate cases are filed with the St. Lucie County Clerk of Court and heard in the 19th Judicial Circuit Court. The main courthouse is the Fort Pierce Courthouse at 218 S. 2nd Street, Fort Pierce (the St. Lucie County seat). Some hearings are held at the Port St. Lucie government center as well.

The 19th Judicial Circuit covers four counties: St. Lucie, Indian River, Martin, and Okeechobee. Probate judges in the circuit have specialized experience in Florida estate administration.

The basic sequence is the same in every Florida case:

  1. File the petition. The personal representative (or their attorney) files a petition for administration with the St. Lucie County Clerk, along with the original will if there is one.
  2. Letters of administration issue. The court formally appoints the personal representative.
  3. Notify creditors. A Notice to Creditors is published in a St. Lucie County newspaper of general circulation, and known creditors are served directly.
  4. Inventory and appraise the estate. The personal representative files an inventory listing all probate assets and their values within 60 days of letters issuing.
  5. Resolve creditor claims. Creditors have 90 days from publication (or 30 days from direct service, whichever is later) to file claims.
  6. File estate tax returns if required. Most Florida estates owe no tax (there's no Florida estate tax), but federal returns may apply for larger estates.
  7. Distribute remaining assets. After debts and expenses are paid, the personal representative distributes assets to beneficiaries.
  8. Close the estate. Final accounting is filed with the court, and the personal representative is discharged.

Our full walkthrough of the first 30 days is in how to start the probate process in Florida after a loved one passes.

Formal vs. summary administration: which applies in Port St. Lucie?

Florida has two main probate paths. The right one depends on the size of the estate and how long ago the decedent passed.

Question Formal Administration Summary Administration
When does it apply? Most estates over $75,000 with a decedent who died within the last 2 years Estates under $75,000 (excluding exempt property), OR decedent died more than 2 years ago
Personal representative appointed? Yes, court issues letters of administration No, petitioners file directly for distribution order
Notice to Creditors required? Yes, published, 90-day claim window Generally no (especially after the 2-year nonclaim period)
Inventory filed with court? Yes, within 60 days of letters issuing Not required
Typical timeline (St. Lucie County) 6 to 12 months uncontested 4 to 8 weeks
Attorney required? Yes (with limited exceptions) Sometimes can be filed pro se, but most petitioners use counsel
Cost Higher: court fees, publication, attorney/PR fees governed by Stat. 733.617 / 733.6171 Significantly lower

Our full guide on summary administration in Florida walks through qualifying criteria, required documents, and the process. A third path, disposition without administration, is available for very small estates where the only assets are exempt property and reasonable funeral expenses.

How long does Port St. Lucie probate take, and how much does it cost?

Type of case Timeline Notes
Summary administration 4 to 8 weeks From filing to distribution order, assuming no objections
Uncontested formal administration 6 to 9 months Straightforward estate, no creditor disputes, easy-to-value assets
Complex formal administration 9 to 18 months Business interests, real estate to be sold, ancillary administration
Contested probate 1 to 3+ years Will contest, breach of fiduciary duty, or major creditor litigation

Court filing fees and publication costs typically run a few hundred dollars combined. Attorney and personal representative fees are governed by Florida Statute 733.6171 and 733.617, which set presumptively reasonable percentages of estate value. Most attorneys negotiate flat or hourly fees below the statutory percentages for routine cases.

Need to start a Port St. Lucie probate case?

We file in the 19th Judicial Circuit and handle most communication remotely. First consultation is free. Call (561) 672-1161 or request a callback.

What are the duties of a personal representative in Florida?

The personal representative (Florida's term for executor) is a fiduciary, personally liable for breaching their duties. Major obligations under Chapter 733 of the Florida Statutes:

  • Marshaling the estate's assets and protecting them from loss
  • Notifying known creditors and publishing notice to unknown creditors
  • Filing an inventory with the court within 60 days of letters issuing
  • Paying valid debts, taxes, and expenses of administration
  • Distributing remaining assets to beneficiaries per the will (or under intestacy if there's no will)
  • Filing accountings with the court and a final accounting at closing
  • Acting impartially among beneficiaries and avoiding self-dealing

Our breakdown of what Florida personal representatives are legally required to do covers each duty, including the deadlines that most often trip up first-time PRs.

Florida law also restricts who can serve. A non-resident PR must be a close relative (spouse, sibling, parent, child, or other lineal kin), or be appointed alongside a Florida resident co-PR. Convicted felons cannot serve.

Which assets skip probate in Florida?

Several categories transfer directly to beneficiaries by operation of law or contract, bypassing the court process entirely:

  • Assets in a revocable living trust. The trust itself owns the property, so there's nothing to probate.
  • Jointly titled property with right of survivorship. Passes automatically to the surviving owner.
  • Tenancy by the entireties property (between married couples). Passes to the surviving spouse.
  • Beneficiary-designated accounts. Retirement accounts (IRA, 401(k)), life insurance, annuities, and accounts with payable-on-death (POD) or transfer-on-death (TOD) designations.
  • Florida homestead, treated specially (see callout below).

Full breakdown in probate vs non-probate assets in Florida.

What most people miss

Port St. Lucie has one of the highest concentrations of retirees and snowbirds in Florida. A significant share of estates we handle for the St. Lucie County area involve decedents who maintained dual residency, with primary winter homes in PSL and ties to their original northeast or midwest states. This creates two complications most heirs don't anticipate.

First, ancillary administration. If the decedent was a legal resident of New York or another non-Florida state but owned real estate in Port St. Lucie, the primary probate runs in the home state and an ancillary probate runs in Florida to handle the Florida property. Two cases, two sets of fees, two timelines. Second, homestead determination. Florida homestead passes outside of probate to a protected class of heirs under the Florida Constitution. The court issues a separate Order Determining Homestead Status to confirm the transfer. This catches blended families constantly when the will says one thing but the constitution mandates another.

Can out-of-state heirs handle Port St. Lucie probate?

Yes. We handle a high volume of probate cases for beneficiaries and personal representatives who live outside Florida, often the adult children of snowbirds and full-time retirees who relocated to St. Lucie County and never updated their home-state estate documents.

Out-of-state PRs face a few additional requirements:

  • The non-resident PR must be a qualifying relative under Florida Statute 733.304, or serve alongside a Florida resident co-PR
  • If the decedent owned real estate in Florida but lived elsewhere, the case may proceed as ancillary administration alongside the primary probate in the home state
  • Florida courts allow most filings to be handled by Florida counsel without the PR appearing in person; in-person appearances at the Fort Pierce courthouse are rare and usually only for contested hearings

Our full guide on how out-of-state heirs can navigate a Florida probate case covers the qualifying-relative rules, ancillary administration, and the practical logistics.

What happens if a Port St. Lucie resident dies without a will?

This is called dying intestate. Florida Statute 732 governs how the estate gets distributed, and the order is fixed.

The basic Florida intestate hierarchy:

  • Spouse and no descendants: entire estate to spouse
  • Spouse and descendants, all common to both: entire estate to spouse
  • Spouse and decedent's descendants from a prior relationship: 50% to spouse, 50% to descendants
  • Spouse and spouse's descendants from a prior relationship: 50% to spouse, 50% to decedent's descendants
  • Descendants but no spouse: entire estate to descendants per stirpes
  • No spouse or descendants: parents, then siblings, then more distant relatives

The full hierarchy and the surprises it produces (especially for blended families and unmarried partners, who get nothing under intestacy) are covered in our guide to Florida intestacy laws.

To prevent intestacy for your own family, see our estate planning practice.

When does Port St. Lucie probate become contested?

Most Florida probate cases close without litigation. The ones that go contested usually involve one of four scenarios:

Will contests. A potential heir challenges the validity of the will on grounds of lack of capacity, undue influence, fraud, or improper execution. Florida has a fairly short statute of limitations on will contests, and the burden is generally on the challenger.

Breach of fiduciary duty claims. Beneficiaries allege the PR is mismanaging the estate, self-dealing, failing to communicate, or distributing assets improperly. These cases often involve forced accountings and PR removal petitions.

Creditor disputes. The PR objects to a claim and the creditor files an independent action to enforce it, or vice versa.

Asset characterization disputes. Family members fight over whether an asset is part of the probate estate or passes outside (homestead determinations, joint account ownership challenges, claims that lifetime gifts were really loans).

Probate litigation in Port St. Lucie is heard in the 19th Judicial Circuit's Probate Division. Cases are assigned to probate judges with specialized experience.

Why work with Kelley, Grant & Tanis, P.A.

Brett Halperin leads the firm's probate, estate planning, trust administration, elder law, and asset protection practice. Brett earned his JD from the University of Florida Levin College of Law and his Bachelor's in Economics from the University of Florida, where he was a member of Florida Blue Key. He volunteers with the Mission United Veterans Pro-Bono Legal Project and the Jewish Federation of South Palm Beach County. He's a member in good standing of the Florida Bar.

Full attorney bios on our attorneys page.

The firm's two South Florida offices are approximately 75 to 90 minutes south of Port St. Lucie:

  • West Palm Beach Office: 1645 Palm Beach Lakes Blvd, Suite #1200-3, West Palm Beach, FL 33401 (closest to Port St. Lucie)
  • Boca Raton Office: 370 Camino Gardens Blvd., Suite #301, Boca Raton, FL 33432

Most Port St. Lucie probate matters can be handled remotely. Court filings, document signing, and beneficiary communication happen by mail, email, or remote online notarization. In-person meetings at the West Palm Beach office are available for clients who prefer them.

Probate often touches the firm's other practice areas. Estates with rental property may need eviction support. Estates with title issues benefit from in-house title insurance work. For estate planning to avoid probate, see our estate planning practice.

Frequently Asked Questions

Where are Port St. Lucie probate cases filed?

Port St. Lucie probate cases are filed with the St. Lucie County Clerk of Court and heard in the 19th Judicial Circuit Court. The main courthouse is the Fort Pierce Courthouse at 218 S. 2nd Street, Fort Pierce. The 19th Judicial Circuit also covers Indian River, Martin, and Okeechobee counties.

How long does probate take in Port St. Lucie?

Summary administration typically takes 4 to 8 weeks. Uncontested formal administration runs 6 to 9 months for a straightforward estate. Complex or contested estates can take a year or more.

Does Florida have an estate tax?

No. Florida has no state estate tax and no state inheritance tax. Estates may owe federal estate tax, but only if they exceed the federal exemption (currently in the multi-million-dollar range per person).

Do I qualify for summary administration in St. Lucie County?

You qualify if the decedent's non-exempt estate is worth less than $75,000, or if the decedent has been dead for more than two years. Our guide on summary administration in Florida covers the full criteria.

What is ancillary administration and when do Port St. Lucie estates need it?

Ancillary administration is a secondary probate run in Florida when the decedent was a legal resident of another state but owned Florida real estate. The primary probate runs in the home state; the ancillary probate handles the Florida property. Common in Port St. Lucie given the large snowbird and seasonal-resident population. Both probates need to coordinate on timing, tax, and distribution.

Can I serve as personal representative if I live out of state?

Only if you're a qualifying relative under Florida Statute 733.304: spouse, sibling, parent, child, or other close lineal kin. Otherwise, you'd need a Florida resident co-PR. More on this in how out-of-state heirs can navigate a Florida probate case.

How much does probate cost in St. Lucie County?

Court filing fees and publication costs typically run a few hundred dollars combined. Attorney and personal representative fees are governed by Florida Statute 733.6171 and 733.617, which set presumptively reasonable percentages of estate value. Most attorneys negotiate flat or hourly fees below the statutory percentages for routine cases.

Can a Port St. Lucie probate be handled entirely remotely?

Yes, in most cases. Most communication happens by email, phone, and remote online notarization. Court filings are handled by counsel. The personal representative rarely needs to appear in person, and when they do, it's usually only for contested hearings. We handle most Port St. Lucie probate matters without clients needing to visit our offices.

Schedule a Probate Consultation

We handle Port St. Lucie probate from filing through final distribution: formal administration, summary administration, ancillary administration for out-of-state estates, and contested matters. Free initial consultation. Most communication handled remotely.

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