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States→Alaska→Kusilvak Census Area→Getting Started

What to Do After a Death in Kusilvak Census Area, Alaska

The first weeks after losing someone involve time-sensitive tasks. Here's what to prioritize and what can wait.

OverviewGetting StartedCosts & FeesHow to FileFind Attorneys

Handling an estate in Kusilvak Census Area, Alaska means working through both immediate tasks (securing property, ordering death certificates, stopping benefits) and the formal probate process at the District Court at 1 Housing Road, Emmonak. The court is part of the 4th Judicial District.

Kusilvak Census Area has local procedures worth knowing before you start: Probate filings currently paper-only.

1. Order Death Certificates

Find out how many death certificates to order:

2. Estate Settlement Checklist

Track your progress through the probate process:

Once appointed as personal representative, Alaska law requires filing an inventory of estate assets with the District Court within 90 daysAS 13.16.365Verified May 5, 2026. The inventory identifies and values everything the deceased owned — real estate, bank accounts, investments, vehicles, personal belongings.

Alaska requires publishing a notice to creditors in a local newspaper. Creditors then have 4 monthsAS 13.16.460Verified May 5, 2026 to file claims against the estate.

Your first priorities are securing property and stopping automatic payments. Collect mail, lock up valuables, document what's there, and call Social Security at 1-800-772-1213 to report the death — this prevents benefit overpayments that the estate would have to repay later.

Contact banks and credit card companies as soon as possible to freeze accounts and prevent unauthorized transactions or recurring charges. Most institutions require a certified death certificate.

When you're ready to start probate, contact the District Court at 907-949-1748 to confirm what documents you need. You can file in person or by mail — families handling probate themselves don't need to use e-filing.

File life insurance claims early. Proceeds pass directly to named beneficiaries outside probate and are often available within weeks, which can help cover immediate estate expenses while probate is underway.

An attorney is most worth the cost when the estate involves contested assets, disputes between beneficiaries, will challenges, business interests, or real estate in multiple states. Straightforward estates can often be handled without one.

Attorney fees in Alaska typically run 2%AS 13.16.430, AS 13.16.440 (reasonable compensation; no statutory percentage)Verified May 5, 2026 to 4%AS 13.16.430, AS 13.16.440 (reasonable compensation; no statutory percentage)Verified May 5, 2026 of estate value. Flat-fee arrangements are common for straightforward estates without disputes.

Professional help is especially valuable when the estate is large enough to trigger Alaska's estate tax filing thresholds, involves unusual assets, or creates potential liability for the executor.

SimplyTrustSimplyTrust Editorial·Updated May 5, 2026

Legal Sources

  • AS 13.16.365
  • AS 13.16.430, AS 13.16.440 (reasonable compensation; no statutory percentage)
  • AS 13.16.460

Data sourced from Alaska statutes and official state code. How we research.

Frequently Asked Questions

Before anything court-related, handle three things: get the doctor or coroner to sign the death certificate, secure the home and any valuables, and locate the will. Only then does probate planning make sense.

Plan on 8–12 certified copies. Each financial institution, title company, insurer, and the Kusilvak Census Area probate court will ask for an original. Ordering too few is the most common delay families run into. Use the Alaska death certificate calculator for a personalized count.

Alaska does not set a strict filing deadline for opening probate, but delay has costs: the creditor claim period is 4 months, assets stay frozen until probate opens, and some banks refuse to act without letters. Most families file within 30–60 days.

Funeral homes typically report the death to Social Security. Bank and brokerage notifications are on the executor — accounts freeze on notification, so timing matters. The Alaska estate settlement checklist walks through the order.

Yes. A revocable living trust keeps the estate out of Kusilvak Census Area probate entirely — no filing, no hearings, no public record. Families who plan ahead settle in weeks instead of months. Create a revocable trust online before the next generation has to go through what you're handling now.

District Court

Kusilvak Census Area

1 Housing Road

Emmonak, AK 99581

Phone:

907-949-1748

Fax:

907-949-1535

Email:

4EMmailbox@akcourts.gov

Hours:

Monday - Thursday, 8:00 AM - 12:00 PM and 1:00 PM - 4:30 PM; Friday, 8:00 AM - 12:00 PM

Visit Court Website →
Paper Filing Available

Notify Banks & Financial Institutions

Each institution has a separate death claim process. Find yours below.

COUNTRY Financial

COUNTRY Financial logo

Insurance Company serving the Midwest, West, and more

COUNTRY Financial

CU1

CU1 logo

Credit Union serving Alaska

CU1

CSAA Insurance

CSAA Insurance logo

Insurance Company serving the West, Northeast, and more

CSAA Insurance

First National Bank Alaska

First National Bank Alaska logo

Bank serving Alaska

First National Bank Alaska

Global CU

Global CU logo

Credit Union serving the West and Southwest

Global CU

KeyBank

KeyBank logo

Bank serving the West, Northeast, and more

KeyBank

Northrim Bank

Northrim Bank logo

Bank serving Alaska

Northrim Bank

Acorns

Acorns logo

Brokerage serving all 50 states

Acorns

ADP

ADP logo

Retirement Provider serving all 50 states

ADP

Aetna

Aetna logo

Insurance Company serving all 50 states

Aetna

Aflac

Aflac logo

Insurance Company serving all 50 states

Aflac

VALIC

VALIC logo

Insurance Company serving all 50 states

VALIC

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