Probate in Canada: How It Works and Why It Matters
Many people feel uneasy when the topic of probate comes up, often because they’re unsure what it actually involves.
Some people worry they’re doing something wrong if probate is required. Others assume probate should be avoided at all costs. And many people quietly hope it’ll never apply to them.
But here’s the truth about probate: It isn’t good or bad. It’s simply a legal process that confirms who has the authority to deal with someone’s estate after death. In some situations, it’s unavoidable. In others, it may not be needed at all. And in many cases, how difficult probate becomes has far more to do with preparation than with the court system itself.
The fundamentals of probate in Canada remain largely the same. What’s changed is how estates are administered in practice, how institutions respond, and how much responsibility now falls on executors who are often unprepared for the role.
What Probate Really Is (And What It Isn’t)
At its core, probate is the court’s way of saying “yes, this will is valid, and yes, the person named in the will as executor has the legal authority to act on behalf of the deceased.” If there’s no will, the court process appoints an administrator instead.
That confirmation matters because banks, investment firms, and land titles offices need certainty before they’ll release or transfer assets. Probate gives them that certainty.
Probate isn’t a judgment on how well you planned, it’s not a punishment, and it’s not the same thing as paying tax. Probate is about who has the legal authority to act on behalf of the deceased. And taxes are a separate issue altogether.
When Probate Is Usually Required
A simple way to think about probate is this: If an asset is held in your name alone, someone will usually need probate to deal with it.
Common examples include:
- Real estate held in the deceased’s name alone (or as tenants in common)
- Investment accounts with no named beneficiary
- Bank accounts where the bank requires a grant before releasing funds
- Private company shares
- Situations where there’s uncertainty, confusion, or disagreement
Probate becomes necessary when institutions need legal certainty before releasing assets. That requirement isn’t personal. It’s simply how their processes work.
David was named as executor in his mother’s will. He had the original will, the death certificate, and even a well-organized list of her accounts. But when he contacted the bank, they wouldn’t release any information or allow access. They required the grant of probate from the Court before they would deal with him at all.
Until probate was granted, it didn’t matter how organized David was. Legally, he didn’t have the authority to act.
When Probate Often Isn’t Required
On the other hand, probate often isn’t required for assets that pass automatically outside the estate.
These commonly include:
- Joint accounts with right of survivorship
- Registered accounts with a valid beneficiary designation
- Life insurance with a named beneficiary
- Some smaller estates where institutions apply internal “small estate” thresholds
That said, “not required” isn’t the same as “never requested.” Banks, insurers, and investment firms each apply their own policies, and those policies often involve a degree of discretion. Two estates with identical assets can still be treated very differently depending on the institution and the circumstances. It’s this element of discretion that can catch executors off guard.
Probate Isn’t The Same As “Estate Taxes”
This is one of the most common points of confusion, and it’s where I see people make decisions that unintentionally create bigger problems later.
Canada doesn’t have a standalone inheritance tax. There isn’t a separate tax on money that someone has left to their loved ones.
What does happen is this: when someone dies, the Canada Revenue Agency treats certain assets as if they were sold at fair market value on the date of death. Any income earned up to that point, and any capital gains triggered by that deemed sale, still need to be reported and paid on the deceased tax return. That can create a significant tax bill, especially when real estate, non-registered investments, or business interests are involved. And that tax bill usually has to be paid before beneficiaries receive anything.
Probate is a completely separate issue.
Probate is about authority and process. It answers the question, “Who is legally allowed to act for the estate?” Taxes answer a different question: “What does the deceased, or the estate, still owe?”
This distinction matters because many people focus on avoiding probate fees, which are visible and easy to point to, while overlooking the tax consequences triggered at death, including taxes arising from deemed dispositions.
If the estate doesn’t have enough accessible cash to pay income taxes, professional fees, and ongoing expenses, the executor may be forced to sell assets quickly or make difficult decisions under pressure. That’s where stress and conflict usually show up.
Good planning isn’t just about whether probate can be avoided. It’s about making sure the estate has the authority, cash flow, and flexibility needed to be settled properly.
Antonia was executor for an estate where most assets passed directly to beneficiaries, so probate wasn’t required. On the surface, it looked straightforward, and she assumed the estate would be simple to wrap up. But she hadn’t anticipated the tax side.
When the final tax return was prepared, a significant tax bill came due as a result of deemed dispositions at death. Even though the assets themselves didn’t flow through the estate, the tax obligation still did. Without probate, Antonia still had to deal with CRA, file the required returns, and make sure the taxes were paid before the estate could be considered settled.
If you’ve never looked at your own situation through this lens (authority, taxes, and liquidity), you’re not alone. Most people haven’t. If you want help thinking through how this would look in your situation and what it could mean for your executor, that’s exactly the kind of work I do through NEXsteps. It’s not about legal advice. It’s about spotting practical gaps before someone else is left to deal with them.
If you’d like to talk it through, visit the Services page on this site or contact me.
What’s New Or Notable
There’s no single national “probate overhaul” because probate is provincial. But there are some practical developments worth noting.
Some provinces, including Alberta, continue moving toward digital probate filing systems. Traditionally, this was positioned primarily for lawyers, and more recently there have been pilots and expanded access for self-represented applicants in certain situations. If you’re in Alberta, this is worth paying attention to because it affects how applications are submitted and, over time, may affect processing experiences.
Fee structures also remain very province-specific. Some Canadians are surprised to learn how dramatically probate costs vary across the country. Ontario and British Columbia are often cited as higher-cost jurisdictions, while Alberta’s court filing fees are comparatively low and capped.
What Does Probate Cost?
Probate costs vary by province, and the court filing fee is only one small part of what an estate actually costs to settle.
Executors often discover that the real expenses show up elsewhere: professional fees, valuations, property costs, insurance, and the time it takes to pull everything together.
For many estates, the biggest costs aren’t the probate filing fee itself. They’re the indirect costs that come from delays, confusion, and missing information.
Every province and territory uses its own fee model. Some use flat fees, others use percentages, and some have special rules depending on estate size. Also, “probate fees” and “court filing fees” are not always the same thing, and some jurisdictions have both.
Use the table below as a practical snapshot, then confirm current details in your jurisdiction if you’re dealing with an active estate.
| Province / Territory | Current probate fee / tax (2026 snapshot) |
|---|---|
| Alberta | Surrogate (probate/administration) filing fees based on net value in Alberta:
|
| British Columbia | Probate Fee Act (fee on estate value):
Note: In practice, many executors also encounter a separate court filing fee (often cited as $200) for applications over $25,000, depending on the registry process. |
| Manitoba | Probate charges eliminated (no probate fee).
Note: Other court costs may still apply depending on what’s filed, but the “probate charge” itself was removed. |
| New Brunswick | Probate fees (value-based):
Note: Additional court fees may apply. |
| Newfoundland and Labrador |
|
| Nova Scotia |
|
| Ontario | Estate Administration Tax (EAT):
|
| Prince Edward Island |
|
| Quebec | No probate fee for a notarial will.
If a will must be verified (probated) through the court process (commonly for holograph wills or wills made in front of witnesses), court fees apply.
|
| Saskatchewan | Probate fee: $7 per $1,000 (or part) (0.7%) of value passing through the estate.
Court filing fee: flat $200 (plus $25 if a Certificate of No Infants is requested). |
| Yukon | Filing fee: $140 to obtain a Grant of Probate for estates over $25,000. |
| Northwest Territories |
|
| Nunavut |
|
Important: Probate fees apply only to the value of assets that actually require probate in that jurisdiction. That’s often less than “everything someone owned.” If you’re unsure what will be counted, it’s worth getting clarity before you assume what the cost will be.
How Long Does Probate Take?
Timelines vary widely, and it’s one of the hardest questions to answer without knowing the province, the court backlog, and whether the application is straightforward.
In many cases, a “simple” probate can still take months. A disputed estate or an estate with missing paperwork can take much longer.
Even in places where the application itself is processed relatively quickly, the overall estate timeline often stretches out due to tax filings, waiting for clearance, asset liquidations, or real estate sales.
For most families, the biggest time drains aren’t the court fee. They’re things like:
- Locating the original will and confirming it’s the latest version
- Getting accurate date-of-death values for assets
- Notifying beneficiaries and interested parties properly
- Dealing with institutions that each have their own requirements
- Managing final tax filings and CRA processing timelines
Common Probate Myths That Cause Real Damage
“Probate is always bad and should always be avoided.”
Sometimes probate is the cleanest, safest path. Trying to avoid it at all costs can create bigger problems.
“Joint ownership is a simple probate workaround.”
Joint ownership can be appropriate in some situations, but it isn’t a universal solution. In some cases, it can create bigger problems than the ones it was meant to solve.
“If there’s a will, there’s no probate.”
A will helps. It doesn’t guarantee probate won’t be needed.
“Probate fees are the biggest cost.”
For many estates, they aren’t. Taxes, delays, and professional fees usually cost far more.
How to Make Things Easier for Your Executor
If you want to spare your executor and your family unnecessary stress, focus on clarity rather than cleverness.
Here are practical steps that tend to make the biggest difference:
- Make sure your executor knows where the original will is stored
- Create a simple list of assets and key contacts
- Keep beneficiary designations current
- Reduce “mystery assets”
- Provide lists of digital accounts
- Be clear about who gets personal and sentimental items
- Name the right executor and confirm they’re willing to take on the role
These steps do far more to reduce stress than trying to engineer a probate-free estate.
The Takeaway
Probate hasn’t fundamentally changed. It’s still a legal process that confirms who has the authority to act. Whether it’s routine or complicated usually comes down to preparation, not the court process itself. Clear intentions, accessible documents, and organized information make all the difference.
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Disclaimer: This content is for general information only and is not legal, financial, medical, or tax advice.