Hiring a Estate Administration Attorney in District of Columbia

Estate administration in District of Columbia typically runs 612 months for simple estates and 1836 months for complex ones. The minimum timeline is largely set by the creditor claim period (6 months), during which the executor can't safely distribute assets. Living trusts bypass this entirely because they don't go through probate. The District of Columbia estate settlement plan walks through the steps.

District of Columbia allows executors "reasonable compensation," typically 2%–4% of the estateD.C. Code § 20-751 (reasonable compensation; no statutory percentage)Verified Jul 14, 2026. Executors can also waive their fee entirely or accept a reduced amount. When the executor is a family member who is also a beneficiary, waiving the fee is common because beneficiary distributions aren't taxed as income while executor fees are. See the District of Columbia executor fee calculator.

Estate planning attorneys in District of Columbia average $347 per hourClio Legal Trends Report 2025Verified Jan 1, 2025 for wills and estates work. Flat-fee packages run roughly $1,041$2,082 for a simple individual will and $3,820$5,730 for a basic revocable trust. Online and DIY services cost $30–$300 for the same documents — see the will cost calculator for a side-by-side comparison.

District of Columbia allows estates under $40,000 to use a simplified Transfer by Affidavit procedure, which is a form rather than a court case and typically doesn't require an attorney. For larger estates, formal probate is involved enough that retaining counsel is usually practical — the procedural work is what they're there for. Use the District of Columbia probate calculator to estimate the costs.

In District of Columbia, the situations where retaining counsel is typically worth the cost are: blended families with children from prior relationships; ownership of a business, rental property, or significant investment assets; special-needs dependents who need a special-needs trust to preserve benefits; estates near or above the District of Columbia estate tax threshold; substantial property held in multiple states. If none of these describe your situation, the simpler online and DIY tools are often enough.