When a Brooklyn resident dies leaving only a modest amount of personal property, the family does not always need a full probate or administration proceeding. New York provides a streamlined alternative called voluntary administration — what most people know as the small estate affidavit. It is governed by SCPA Article 13, and in Brooklyn it is handled by the Kings County Surrogate’s Court.
This page explains, in concrete terms, how the small estate process works for Kings County estates, who qualifies, what it does and does not cover, and when you are better off filing a full probate proceeding instead. Whether the decedent lived in Bay Ridge, Bushwick, Crown Heights, or Sheepshead Bay, the same Article 13 rules and the same Brooklyn courthouse apply.
If you would like a Brooklyn probate attorney to review whether a small estate affidavit fits your situation, attorney Russel Morgan, Esq. of Morgan Legal Group offers a consultation you can book directly through our scheduling link.
What a Small Estate Affidavit Actually Is
A small estate affidavit is not the same thing as probate. In a full probate proceeding, the Surrogate’s Court validates the will and issues Letters Testamentary under SCPA §1414, appointing an executor with broad authority over the estate. Voluntary administration is lighter: instead of a full executor or administrator, the court appoints a Voluntary Administrator whose powers are limited to collecting and distributing the decedent’s modest personal property.
The mechanism is an affidavit of voluntary administration filed with the Kings County Surrogate’s Court. Once accepted, the court issues a certificate that the Voluntary Administrator presents to banks, the DMV, and other institutions to collect the decedent’s assets. There is no decree, no citation of distributees, and no return date in the way a contested probate would have.
Article 13 exists precisely so that families of people with small bank accounts and personal belongings are not forced into the expense and delay of full administration. It is one of the most useful — and most misunderstood — tools in New York estate practice.
The 2026 Threshold: What Counts as a “Small Estate” in New York
New York measures a small estate by the value of the decedent’s personal property, and importantly, real property is generally excluded from the calculation. That distinction trips up many Brooklyn families, because Brooklyn is a borough of homeowners — a co-op in Park Slope or a brownstone in Bedford-Stuyvesant changes the analysis dramatically.
Here is how the pieces fit together:
| Concept | What it means in Brooklyn |
|---|---|
| Governing statute | SCPA Article 13 (voluntary administration) |
| Court | Kings County Surrogate’s Court |
| Asset measured | Personal property only (bank accounts, vehicles, wages, personal effects) |
| Real property | Generally excluded from the small-estate calculation |
| Appointee | Voluntary Administrator (not a full executor/administrator) |
| Authority document | Certificate of voluntary administration |
| Filing fee | Set by statute and modest for small estates — confirm the current amount with the court |
Two important cautions about the threshold. First, the dollar limit for voluntary administration is set by statute and is periodically adjusted; you must confirm the current figure with the Kings County Surrogate’s Court or counsel before filing, rather than relying on a number you saw online. Second, because real property is excluded, an estate can hold a valuable Brooklyn home and still qualify for a small estate affidavit if the personal property is below the threshold — though a home almost always means you also need a separate proceeding to deal with the real estate.
Why Real Property Changes Everything in Brooklyn
Brooklyn’s housing market makes the real-property exclusion the single most important issue in most small estate questions we see. A few scenarios:
- Decedent owned a co-op apartment in Brooklyn Heights. A co-op is technically personal property (shares in a corporation plus a proprietary lease), not real property. That means a co-op’s value may count toward the small-estate threshold — a frequent surprise that can push an estate over the limit and into full administration.
- Decedent owned a one-family house in Canarsie. Real property is excluded from the Article 13 calculation, so the house does not block a small estate affidavit for the personal property. But the small estate affidavit gives the Voluntary Administrator no power to sell or transfer the house, so a separate probate or administration proceeding is usually required to clear title.
- Decedent had a small checking account and personal belongings only. This is the classic small estate. Article 13 voluntary administration is almost certainly the right tool.
Because of these distinctions, the most common mistake is assuming that a modest bank balance automatically means a small estate. The presence of a co-op, a business interest, or jointly held assets can flip the answer. When in doubt, have the asset mix reviewed before filing.
Step-by-Step: Filing a Small Estate Affidavit in Kings County
The voluntary administration process at the Kings County Surrogate’s Court generally follows these steps:
- Confirm eligibility. Total the decedent’s personal property and compare it to the current Article 13 threshold. Exclude real property. Identify whether a co-op, vehicle, or other asset complicates the count.
- Identify the proper petitioner. If there is a will, the named executor (or the person entitled to letters) acts as Voluntary Administrator. If there is no will, the priority order under New York’s intestacy rules (spouse, then children, and so on) controls who may serve.
- Gather the core documents. You will need the original will if one exists, a certified death certificate, a list of the decedent’s assets and their values, and the names and addresses of the distributees and beneficiaries.
- Complete the affidavit of voluntary administration. The Surrogate’s Court provides the form. It identifies the decedent, the assets, the heirs, and the proposed Voluntary Administrator.
- File with the Kings County Surrogate’s Court and pay the modest statutory filing fee.
- Receive the certificate. Once accepted, the court issues a certificate of voluntary administration for each asset, which the Voluntary Administrator presents to banks and other holders.
- Collect, pay, and distribute. The Voluntary Administrator collects the listed assets into an estate account, pays the decedent’s debts and funeral expenses in the order set by law, and distributes the remainder to the beneficiaries or heirs.
Unlike full probate, there is generally no need to serve a citation or wait for a return date, which is why the process is faster. For an overview of how this differs from a standard proceeding, see our Surrogate’s Court guide and our probate overview.
Small Estate Affidavit vs. Full Probate: How to Choose
The small estate affidavit is the right tool only when the facts fit. Here is how the two paths compare for a Brooklyn estate.
| Feature | Small Estate Affidavit (SCPA Art. 13) | Full Probate (SCPA §1414) |
|---|---|---|
| Asset ceiling | Personal property under the statutory threshold | No ceiling |
| Real property authority | None — house/condo not covered | Executor can manage and sell with court oversight |
| Appointee | Voluntary Administrator | Executor with Letters Testamentary |
| Interim authority | Not applicable | Preliminary Letters Testamentary available (SCPA §1412) |
| Distributee notice | Generally none required | Waiver/consent or citation required |
| Typical timeline | Weeks once filed | Roughly 3–6 months uncontested |
| Typical attorney cost | Lower; limited scope | Often ~$3,000–$10,000 depending on complexity |
A few decision points worth flagging:
- There is real property to transfer. A small estate affidavit will not move title to a Brooklyn house or condo. You will need probate (if there is a will) or administration (if there is not). See executor duties for what that role involves.
- The will may be challenged. If you anticipate a dispute among heirs, the small estate route offers none of the procedural protections of a full proceeding. A contest belongs in formal probate — see our contested probate page.
- Assets exceed the threshold. If personal property is over the limit, you must file full probate or administration, and Article 13 is unavailable.
- You need immediate authority. In a full probate that may take months, the court can issue Preliminary Letters Testamentary under SCPA §1412 so the nominated executor can act while the case is pending. Voluntary administration has no equivalent, but it is usually fast enough that interim authority is unnecessary.
Estate Taxes and the Small Estate
A small estate affidavit governs who collects and distributes assets — it does not change whether estate tax is owed. For 2026, New York’s estate tax basic exclusion amount is $7,350,000. New York also applies a “cliff”: if the taxable estate exceeds 105% of the exclusion — $7,717,500 — the entire estate becomes taxable, not just the excess.
In practice, almost every estate small enough to qualify for Article 13 voluntary administration falls far below the New York estate tax threshold, so estate tax is rarely a concern in these cases. But because the small-estate calculation excludes real property while the tax calculation does not, a Brooklyn family with a valuable home should still confirm its overall tax position with counsel.
Common Brooklyn Pitfalls
- Treating a co-op like real estate. Co-op shares are personal property and may count toward the threshold — a recurring issue in Brooklyn Heights, Park Slope, and DUMBO.
- Forgetting the house still needs a proceeding. A small estate affidavit covers the bank account but not the family home.
- Using the wrong petitioner. When there is no will, the order of priority under New York’s intestacy rules controls who may serve as Voluntary Administrator.
- Relying on outdated thresholds. The Article 13 dollar limit changes over time; always confirm the current figure with the Kings County Surrogate’s Court.
- Missing creditors. The Voluntary Administrator must pay valid debts and funeral expenses before distributing — distributing too early can create personal liability.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the asset limit for a small estate affidavit in New York?
New York’s voluntary administration limit is set by SCPA Article 13 and is periodically adjusted, so we do not quote a fixed number here. It measures the decedent’s personal property only; real property is generally excluded. Confirm the current threshold with the Kings County Surrogate’s Court or with counsel before filing.
Does a small estate affidavit cover my parent’s Brooklyn house?
No. Real property is excluded from the Article 13 calculation, and a Voluntary Administrator has no authority to sell or transfer a house. To deal with a Brooklyn home, you generally need full probate (if there is a will) or administration (if there is not), separate from any small estate affidavit.
How long does voluntary administration take in Kings County?
It is much faster than full probate. Because there is no citation, return date, or decree, families often complete voluntary administration in a matter of weeks once the affidavit is accepted, compared with roughly 3–6 months for an uncontested full probate.
Can I use a small estate affidavit if there is a will?
Yes. If the will names an executor, that person typically serves as the Voluntary Administrator, and the original will is filed with the affidavit. However, if the estate’s personal property exceeds the threshold, or if the will is likely to be contested, you should file a full probate proceeding instead.
Do I need a lawyer for a small estate affidavit?
It is not legally required, but a Brooklyn probate attorney can confirm eligibility, identify hidden complications like co-op shares or out-of-state assets, and make sure debts are paid correctly. Attorney Russel Morgan, Esq. of Morgan Legal Group can review your situation through our scheduling link.
This page is general information about New York’s SCPA Article 13 voluntary administration as handled by the Kings County Surrogate’s Court. It is not legal advice. For guidance on your specific Brooklyn estate, consult a qualified attorney. Authoritative sources include the New York State Unified Court System, the New York State Legislature, and the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance.
Further reading from Morgan Legal Group: common mistakes executors make.