Our Expert in Ireland
No results available
Last updated: 10 May 2026
Choosing between estate administration lawyers in Ireland has become more urgent since the Courts Service confirmed updated probate processing timelines on 27 April 2026, signalling changes to how quickly executors can expect a Grant of Probate or Letters of Administration. Alongside shifting timelines, probate fees Ireland-wide remain opaque, solicitors use at least four different charging models, and executors who fail to compare costs risk over-paying by thousands of euro. At the same time, Capital Acquisitions Tax (CAT) thresholds, valuation-date rules, and filing deadlines create real financial exposure for executors and beneficiaries alike.
This guide translates the latest official guidance from the Courts Service, Revenue, and the Law Society of Ireland into a practical decision framework covering fees, Grant timelines, and CAT risks, so you can instruct a solicitor with confidence.
Not every estate requires a solicitor. According to Citizens Information, small estates consisting only of cash held in a single financial institution may be released directly to the next of kin without a formal Grant, provided the institution is satisfied with the documentation. However, where real property is involved, where the estate exceeds modest cash thresholds, or where any dispute exists, a Grant of Probate (testate) or Letters of Administration (intestate) is essential, and professional legal advice is strongly recommended.
Use this checklist to decide whether to instruct a solicitor:
An executor is named in the will and applies for a Grant of Probate. An administrator is appointed by the court when no valid will exists (or no executor is willing to act) and applies for Letters of Administration. Both carry the same core legal duties, gathering assets, paying debts and taxes, and distributing the estate, but the application process and required bonds differ. Industry observers note that Letters of Administration typically add two to four weeks to overall processing time because of the additional bond requirement.
The Courts Service published updated guidance on 27 April 2026 regarding probate processing timelines, reinforcing its commitment to reducing backlogs in the Probate Office and District Probate Registries. Executors and their solicitors should use the table below to set realistic expectations for each stage of the probate process.
| Process step | Typical duration (pre-27 Apr 2026) | Expected duration (post-27 Apr 2026 update) |
|---|---|---|
| Gathering assets, valuations, and documents | 4–8 weeks | 4–8 weeks (unchanged, executor-dependent) |
| Solicitor prepares and lodges Inland Revenue Affidavit (CA24) and Probate application | 2–4 weeks | 2–4 weeks (unchanged, solicitor-dependent) |
| Probate Office processes application and issues Grant | 8–20 weeks | 6–16 weeks (Courts Service target range) |
| Post-Grant administration (pay debts, file CAT returns, distribute) | 8–26 weeks | 8–26 weeks (unchanged, estate-dependent) |
| Total indicative end-to-end | 22–58 weeks | 20–54 weeks |
The likely practical effect of the Courts Service update will be a modest reduction in the Probate Office processing window, from a previous upper range of roughly 20 weeks down to a target of around 16 weeks for straightforward applications. Complex or contested matters, or those filed at District Probate Registries with smaller staff complements, may still experience probate delays in 2026.
Executors are advised, and in practice required, to wait at least six months from the date the Grant issues before distributing assets. This waiting period allows creditors to come forward with claims against the estate. Under the Succession Act 1965, an executor who distributes prematurely and without regard to known or reasonably discoverable debts may be personally liable to unpaid creditors. The six-month window also gives beneficiaries time to lodge any Section 117 application for proper provision.
No. Very small estates comprising only cash in a bank or credit union, where the balance falls below the institution’s internal threshold (often around €25,000), may be released without a formal Grant. Joint-tenancy property passes automatically to the surviving joint tenant by operation of law, bypassing probate entirely. However, sole-name property, shares, and investment portfolios almost always require a Grant before title can transfer.
Understanding probate solicitor fees starts with recognising that there is no single regulated fee scale in Ireland. The Law Society of Ireland requires solicitors to provide a written costs agreement (Section 150 notice under the Legal Services Regulation Act 2015), but the fee model itself is a matter of negotiation. The four most common charging structures are outlined below.
A standard fee quotation should cover the following line items. If any are excluded, the solicitor must disclose that clearly in the Section 150 notice:
The table below offers indicative fee bands based on publicly available market data and typical practitioner charging. These are estimates, actual probate fees in Ireland will vary by estate complexity, geographic location, and firm size.
| Estate value band | Typical solicitor fee model | Estimated total (solicitor + disbursements, excl. VAT) |
|---|---|---|
| Up to €150,000 (cash/savings only) | Fixed fee | €2,500–€4,000 |
| €150,001–€500,000 (property + savings) | Fixed or blended | €4,000–€8,000 |
| €500,001–€1,000,000 | Percentage (1.5–2%) or blended | €7,500–€15,000 |
| Over €1,000,000 | Percentage (1–2%) or hourly | €12,000–€25,000+ |
Consider an estate worth €400,000 (family home valued at €320,000 plus €80,000 in savings). A solicitor quoting a blended fee might propose:
A probate costs calculator can help you model your own estate, but the above example shows how quickly disbursements add up. Always request a full written breakdown before signing the engagement letter.
If your solicitor offers a probate fixed fee, the engagement letter should specify: (a) exactly which services are included and excluded; (b) the fixed amount and what triggers additional charges; (c) estimated disbursements listed separately; (d) VAT treatment; and (e) the right to a detailed bill upon request. The Law Society of Ireland recommends that solicitors provide this level of detail at the outset under best-practice client-care standards.
Capital Acquisitions Tax (CAT) is the primary tax risk arising from estate administration in Ireland. Revenue publishes detailed guidance on CAT thresholds, rates, and filing obligations. The key parameters for 2026 are summarised below.
A child inheriting a property worth €450,000 from a parent (Group A) would calculate liability as follows:
The beneficiary is primarily liable for paying CAT. However, executors bear a secondary liability: if the beneficiary fails to pay, Revenue can pursue the executor personally for any CAT properly attributable to the estate. This makes CAT inheritance tax planning essential from the outset of administration.
CAT returns must be filed by 31 October in the year following the valuation date (or the extended ROS deadline, typically mid-November, for electronic filers). Late filing attracts surcharges and interest. Executors should ensure beneficiaries are aware of their obligations and retain sufficient estate funds to cover any shortfall until CAT is confirmed as paid.
An executor holds a fiduciary position. The Succession Act 1965, read together with Revenue’s administrative requirements, imposes a wide range of obligations. The following checklist summarises the key duties and associated timelines.
| Task | Who is responsible | Deadline / typical time |
|---|---|---|
| Register the death and obtain death certificate | Family / executor | Within 3 months of death |
| Locate original will and notify beneficiaries | Executor | As soon as practicable |
| Value all assets and liabilities | Executor / solicitor | 4–8 weeks post-death |
| Prepare and swear Inland Revenue Affidavit (CA24) | Solicitor / executor | Before lodging probate application |
| Lodge probate application with Probate Office | Solicitor | Once CA24 is sworn |
| Pay debts, funeral expenses, and specific legacies | Executor | After Grant issues; before distribution |
| File IT38 (CAT return) for each beneficiary or ensure beneficiaries do so | Beneficiary (executor secondary) | 31 October following the valuation date |
| Distribute residuary estate | Executor | After 6-month waiting period and once all debts/tax cleared |
| Prepare and furnish estate accounts to beneficiaries | Executor / solicitor | Upon completion of administration |
Yes. Under the Capital Acquisitions Tax Consolidation Act 2003, where an executor distributes estate assets before ensuring that CAT has been paid or adequately provided for, Revenue may assess the executor personally. Penalties for incorrect returns can reach 100% of the tax underpaid in cases of deliberate default. Executors should obtain professional tax advice, retain a reserve fund until all CAT clearances are confirmed, and maintain detailed records of every valuation, payment, and distribution decision.
Instructing the right solicitor is one of the most consequential decisions an executor will make. Use the following questions at your first consultation to compare firms effectively:
Look for solicitors who specialise in estate administration rather than those offering probate as a side service. A specialist is more likely to anticipate problems, minimise delays, and negotiate effectively with Revenue.
Estate administration in Ireland in 2026 demands prompt, informed action. The Courts Service’s updated processing targets offer cautious optimism on Grant timelines, but executor duties, probate fees, and CAT liability remain significant sources of financial and legal risk. Whether your estate is straightforward or complex, comparing fee models, demanding written cost agreements, and addressing CAT exposure early will protect both executors and beneficiaries. If you are looking for specialist estate administration lawyers in Ireland, seek a practitioner who combines probate expertise with transparent pricing and proactive tax planning.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Helen McGrath at O’Connor LLP, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
posted 5 minutes ago
posted 18 minutes ago
posted 29 minutes ago
posted 40 minutes ago
posted 50 minutes ago
posted 1 hour ago
posted 1 hour ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
No results available
Find the right Legal Expert for your business
Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.
Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Send welcome message