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When a loved one passes away in Goshen, Newburgh, Middletown, Monroe, or anywhere across Orange County, the family often expects a long, costly court process. But New York law provides a streamlined alternative for modest estates. If the decedent’s personal property falls under a statutory threshold, you may be able to settle the estate using a small estate affidavit — formally known as voluntary administration under SCPA Article 13 — without a full probate or administration proceeding in the Orange County Surrogate’s Court.

This guide, prepared by Morgan Legal Group and attorney Russel Morgan, Esq., explains how voluntary administration works, who qualifies, what property is excluded, and how the process unfolds at the Orange County Surrogate’s Court in Goshen. It is written for general guidance and is not a substitute for legal advice on your specific estate.

What Is a Small Estate Affidavit?

A small estate affidavit is the document at the heart of New York’s voluntary administration procedure. Instead of petitioning for full Letters Testamentary (when there is a will) or Letters of Administration (when there is none), the person handling the estate files an affidavit with the Surrogate’s Court. The court reviews it and, if everything is in order, issues a short certificate authorizing that person — called the voluntary administrator — to collect the decedent’s assets, pay debts, and distribute what remains.

The procedure is governed by SCPA Article 13 (Sections 1301 through 1312). It exists precisely so that families with modest estates are not forced into the expense and delay of a formal proceeding. In Orange County, this means residents of communities from Port Jervis to Warwick can often resolve a simple estate in weeks rather than months.

Who Can Use Voluntary Administration in Orange County?

The threshold question is the size and type of the estate. Voluntary administration is available only when the decedent’s personal property subject to administration falls under the statutory small estate limit set in SCPA Article 13. The figure is set by statute and is periodically reviewed by the Legislature, so you should confirm the current limit with the Orange County Surrogate’s Court or your attorney before assuming you qualify.

Two features of the limit are critical:

The person who files is typically the executor named in the will (if there is a will) or a close distributee — a surviving spouse, child, or other heir entitled under the laws of intestacy.

Personal Property That Counts Toward the Limit

Asset Type Counts Toward Limit? Notes
Bank / checking / savings accounts (solely owned) Yes Joint accounts with survivorship usually pass outside the estate
Cars, jewelry, household goods Yes Tangible personal property
Stocks, bonds, brokerage accounts Yes If solely owned and not jointly titled
Final wages owed Yes Counts toward the personal property total
Real estate (house, land, condo) No Generally excluded — usually disqualifies small estate
Life insurance with named beneficiary No Passes outside the estate by contract
Retirement accounts with named beneficiary No Passes outside the estate by beneficiary designation

Assets that pass automatically to a named beneficiary or surviving joint owner — life insurance, IRAs, and “payable on death” accounts — generally do not count toward the small estate limit because they never enter the probate estate.

How the Process Works at the Orange County Surrogate’s Court

The Surrogate’s Court for Orange County sits in Goshen, the county seat, and handles all estate matters for the county. While the court staff cannot give legal advice, the procedure follows a predictable sequence:

  1. Gather the core documents. You will need a certified copy of the death certificate, the original will (if one exists), and a list of the decedent’s personal property with approximate values and the names of beneficiaries or distributees.
  2. Complete the affidavit. The small estate affidavit identifies the decedent, the filer, the heirs or beneficiaries, the assets, and the known debts. New York provides a standardized form set for this purpose.
  3. File with the Surrogate’s Court. The affidavit and supporting documents are submitted to the Orange County Surrogate’s Court. A modest filing fee applies; small estate filing fees are set by statute and are far lower than the graduated filing fees that apply to full probate under SCPA §2402. Confirm the exact amount with the court.
  4. Receive the certificate. If the filing is complete and correct, the court issues a Certificate of Voluntary Administration. This is the small estate equivalent of Letters — it proves your authority to act.
  5. Collect, pay, and distribute. Armed with the certificate, the voluntary administrator collects each asset, pays the decedent’s debts and any taxes, and distributes the balance under the will or, if there is no will, under New York’s intestacy rules in the EPTL.

The voluntary administrator must deposit collected funds into an estate account and keep careful records. The role carries the same fiduciary duty of honesty and care that a full executor owes — a duty we explore in detail in our guide to executor duties.

Voluntary Administration vs. Full Probate

It helps to see the small estate path against the alternative. Full probate validates the will and appoints an executor through Letters Testamentary under SCPA §1414, and an executor can sometimes obtain interim authority through Preliminary Letters Testamentary under SCPA §1412 while the petition is pending. Full probate requires jurisdiction over distributees by waiver and consent or by citation, with a decree entered on the return date if no objections are filed.

Feature Small Estate Affidavit (SCPA Art. 13) Full Probate (SCPA Art. 14)
Trigger Personal property under the statutory limit Estate exceeds limit or includes real property
Authority document Certificate of Voluntary Administration Letters Testamentary (SCPA §1414)
Real property Generally cannot be transferred Can be administered and sold
Typical timeline Often a few weeks Roughly 3–6 months uncontested
Filing fee Modest, statutory small estate fee Graduated by estate value (SCPA §2402)
Court Orange County Surrogate’s Court, Goshen Orange County Surrogate’s Court, Goshen

If your situation does not fit the small estate box, our probate overview and Surrogate’s Court guide walk through the full process step by step. And if heirs disagree about the will or the estate, our contested probate resources explain how objections are litigated.

Common Orange County Pitfalls

Several issues trip up families across Orange County:

Why Work With Morgan Legal Group

Even a “simple” estate can hide complications: a forgotten account, an ambiguous will, a creditor who surfaces late, or an asset that should have counted toward the limit but was overlooked. Attorney Russel Morgan, Esq. and the team at Morgan Legal Group help Orange County families confirm whether voluntary administration is the right tool, prepare the affidavit correctly, and avoid the missteps that send an estate back to square one.

Whether you are in Newburgh, Goshen, Middletown, or anywhere in Orange County, we can review the assets, confirm the path, and handle the filing so you can focus on your family.

Schedule a 30-minute consultation with Russel Morgan, Esq.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does a small estate affidavit work if my parent owned a house in Orange County?

Generally no. Real property is excluded from voluntary administration under SCPA Article 13. A solely owned home in Newburgh, Goshen, or any Orange County town typically requires full probate (if there is a will) or administration (if there is none). Speak with counsel about the correct proceeding.

Where do I file a small estate affidavit in Orange County?

You file with the Orange County Surrogate’s Court, located in Goshen, the county seat. The court reviews the affidavit and supporting documents and, if complete, issues a Certificate of Voluntary Administration authorizing you to act.

How long does voluntary administration take in Orange County?

A complete and uncontested small estate filing is often resolved in a matter of weeks — much faster than full probate, which typically runs about three to six months when uncontested. Timing depends on the court’s workload and how quickly assets are collected.

What does the small estate process cost?

The court charges a modest statutory filing fee for voluntary administration, far below the graduated probate fees under SCPA §2402. Attorney fees vary with complexity; full probate engagements commonly run from roughly $3,000 to $10,000, while a simple small estate filing is typically less. Confirm fees with the court and your attorney.

Can I use voluntary administration if there is no will?

Yes. Voluntary administration is available with or without a will, as long as the personal property is under the statutory limit and real property is not involved. Without a will, the assets pass to distributees under New York’s intestacy rules in the EPTL.


This page is general information about New York estate procedure in Orange County and is not legal advice. For guidance on your specific estate, consult a licensed New York attorney. Authoritative resources include the New York Courts Surrogate’s Court information, the SCPA on the New York State Senate site, and the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance.

Further reading from Morgan Legal Group: ways to keep an estate out of probate.