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Probate in Coahoma County runs through the Chancery Court: prove the will, settle the debts, and pass the house to the heirs. Here is how the local process works—and what each step actually costs.
When someone dies in Coahoma County, settling their estate runs through the Chancery Court. This page covers the court record, whether probate is required, what it costs, how to file, transferring property, and the local attorneys who handle probate here.
Probate Court Record
Coahoma County
Address
Phone
Fax
Hours
Chancery Clerk: Sherita Wilson (swilson@coahomacountyms.gov). Deputy clerks: Laura Williams, Sally McNeese, Evangeline Maria Scheider.
Verified June 2, 2026 · Source
Probate is the court-supervised process of settling someone's estate after they die — validating the will, paying debts and taxes, and transferring what's left to the heirs. In Coahoma County, probate runs through the Chancery Court at 115 1st Street, Clarksdale.
The personal representative opens the case, gives notice to heirs and creditors, files an inventory of the estate's assets, settles outstanding debts and taxes, and then distributes the remainder under the will — or under Mississippi intestacy law when there is no will.
Most Mississippi estates take 12 monthsMiss. Code Ann. § 91-7-322 (small estate affidavitVerified Jun 11, 2026 to 18 monthsMiss. Code Ann. § 91-7-322 (small estate affidavitVerified Jun 11, 2026 to move through this process. The 3 monthsMiss. Code Ann. § 91-7-151 (90 days after first publication); § 91-7-145 (notice to creditors; publish weekly for 3 consecutive weeks)Verified Jun 11, 2026 creditor claim window is the largest fixed piece of that timeline — a mandatory wait regardless of how simple the estate is.
What probate costs in Coahoma County, Mississippi comes down to a handful of line items — the court filing fee, attorney and executor compensation, publication, and sometimes a bond — scaled by the estate's size and whether the will is contested. The case itself runs through the Chancery Court at 115 1st Street, Clarksdale.
Mississippi charges $140Miss. Code Ann. § 25-7-9Verified Jun 11, 2026 to open probate, the same in every county. Additional filings during administration — inventory, accounting, the final petition — add to the total.
E-filing is mandatory for attorneys filing at the Chancery Court (https://courts.ms.gov/mec/mec.php). Self-represented filers can request a paper-filing exemption.
Estimate the costs for this estate:
Attorney fees in Mississippi are negotiated, typically 2%Miss. Code § 91-7-281 (attorney fees allowable; reasonable); see also § 91-7-299Verified Jun 11, 2026 to 4%Miss. Code § 91-7-281 (attorney fees allowable; reasonable); see also § 91-7-299Verified Jun 11, 2026 of estate value. Flat-fee arrangements are common for straightforward estates.
Executor compensation runs 2%Miss. Code § 91-7-299 (reasonable compensation; no statutory percentage)Verified Jun 11, 2026 to 4%Miss. Code § 91-7-299 (reasonable compensation; no statutory percentage)Verified Jun 11, 2026 of estate value, based on reasonable pay for time and effort. Family members who are also beneficiaries often waive the fee — executor pay is taxable income while inheritances are not.
Mississippi requires publishing creditor notice in a local newspaper, typically $200–$500. Professional appraisals for real estate or business interests add $300–$600 per asset.
A surety bond may be required unless the will waives it or all beneficiaries consent. Premiums run roughly 0.5%Miss. Code Ann. §§ 91-7-41, 91-7-45Verified Jun 11, 2026 of estate value annually.
Probate in Mississippi typically runs 12 monthsMiss. Code Ann. § 91-7-322 (small estate affidavitVerified Jun 11, 2026 to 18 monthsMiss. Code Ann. § 91-7-322 (small estate affidavitVerified Jun 11, 2026, and costs accrue throughout. The 3 monthsMiss. Code Ann. § 91-7-151 (90 days after first publication); § 91-7-145 (notice to creditors; publish weekly for 3 consecutive weeks)Verified Jun 11, 2026 creditor claim window is the single biggest driver of that timeline — a mandatory wait regardless of estate complexity.
If you're handling probate yourself in Coahoma County, Mississippi, you can file at the Chancery Court in person or by mail. E-filing is mandatory for attorneys but families filing without one are exempt and can use paper forms.
How to File Your Documents
You can file your probate documents in person or by mail. While attorneys are required to e-file in Coahoma County, families handling probate themselves are exempt and can file on paper.
If you prefer, you can file electronically through the state's online system. This is optional for families filing without an attorney.
View E-Filing InformationNot every estate requires an attorney. Estate size, asset types, and whether beneficiaries agree determine if self-filing at the Chancery Court is realistic.
For a full cost comparison and filing checklist, see the Coahoma County Self-Filing Assessment.
To file at the Chancery Court you need: the original will (or proof there isn't one), a certified death certificate, contact information for all heirs and beneficiaries, and a summary of what the estate owns and owes.
Clearing title to real estate after a death—recording a personal representative’s deed, an affidavit of survivorship, or a court order—happens at the Chancery Clerk.
Recording Office Record
Coahoma County
Address
Phone
Fax
Hours
E-recording
Recording fees
| Base recording fee | $25 |
| Per additional page | $1 |
Base fee of $25.00 covers the first 5 pages; each additional page beyond 5 is $1.00 (Miss. Code Ann. 25-7-9(1)(b)). Approximately 51+ counties add a $1.00 records management/archive fee per document (Miss. Code Ann. 25-60-5), bringing the effective base to $26.00. Effective September 24, 2025, handwritten documents are no longer accepted per House Bill 600 (amending Miss. Code Ann. 89-5-24).
Miss. Code Ann. 25-7-9(1)(b)
Transfer tax
No state transfer tax. Mississippi does not impose a documentary stamp tax, conveyance tax, or excise tax on real property transfers.. Transfer-on-death deeds are generally exempt (Mississippi has no transfer tax. Additionally, TOD deeds involve no consideration at recording (Miss. Code Ann. 89-12-1 et seq.).). Mississippi is one of the states that does not impose any form of real estate transfer tax.
Verified June 3, 2026 · Source
Mississippi uses formal, court-supervised probate, which makes an attorney worthwhile for most estates in Coahoma County — the filing sequence, notice requirements, and accounting leave little room for error. Estates under the small-estate threshold are the usual exception.
Probate attorney fees in Mississippi are based on reasonable compensation — typically 2%Miss. Code § 91-7-281 (attorney fees allowable; reasonable); see also § 91-7-299Verified Jun 11, 2026 to 4%Miss. Code § 91-7-281 (attorney fees allowable; reasonable); see also § 91-7-299Verified Jun 11, 2026 of the estate's value, billed hourly or as a flat fee. Ask a Coahoma County firm to quote a structure up front.
A probate attorney files the petition with the Chancery Court, publishes the required creditor notices, prepares the inventory and accounting, handles creditor claims and tax filings, and guides the final distribution. They represent the personal representative — not the beneficiaries — a distinction that matters if a dispute develops.
Founded by Cory R. Lancaster, a tax attorney with an LL.M. in Taxation from the University of Florida. Assists clients throughout Mississippi and Tennessee with estate planning, business law, asset protection, probate or estate administration, elder law and Medicaid planning, charitable planning, and tax consulting.
Location
363 N. Green StreetTupelo, MS 38804
Phone
(662) 823-2679
Service Area
Statewide
One of Mississippi's largest law firms, founded in 1904. Comprehensive estate planning practice covering wills, testamentary trusts, inter vivos trusts (life insurance trusts, special needs trusts, generation-skipping trusts), family limited partnerships, LLCs, charitable foundations, durable powers of attorney, advance healthcare directives, guardianships, Medicaid planning, and estate tax returns. Over 25 attorneys licensed in MS, TN, AL, and AR.
Location
215 North 5th StreetColumbus, MS 39701
Phone
(662) 328-2316
Established
1904
Service Area
Statewide
Specializes in elder law and estate planning matters, helping families protect assets from government programs, taxes, lawsuits, creditors, and nursing home costs. Offers a fixed-fee estate planning process completed within two weeks. Maintains expertise in qualifying wartime veterans for special pension benefits.
Location
402 E. Main StreetClinton, MS 39056
Phone
(601) 925-9797
Established
1997
Service Area
Statewide
Offers comprehensive estate planning solutions including drafting and reviewing wills and trusts, power of attorney documents, healthcare directives, probate and estate administration, and estate tax planning strategies to minimize taxes and protect accumulated wealth. Emphasizes personalized plans that meet specific client needs.
Location
1675 U.S. 80Flowood, MS 39232
Phone
(601) 203-1653
Service Area
Statewide
Firm listings are for informational purposes only. SimplyTrust does not endorse or recommend any specific firm or attorney. Contact firms directly to verify their current practice areas and availability.
Data sourced from Mississippi statutes and official state code. How we research.
You open probate by filing a petition with the Chancery Court in Coahoma County, attaching the original will (if any), the death certificate, and the filing fee ($140). Once the court issues letters, the personal representative can act.
Total probate costs usually run 3–8% of the estate value. For Coahoma County, that means filing fees ($140 to open), attorney fees, executor compensation, publication costs, and possibly a bond. The calculator on this page runs the math for your estate size.
Yes. The Chancery Court in Coahoma County accepts e-filing through the state portal. In-person filing at the courthouse is still available for those without digital access.
Not every estate needs one. Simple estates, small estates under the affidavit threshold, and states with informal probate can often be handled without counsel. Contested wills, out-of-state property, and business interests usually need an attorney. The Mississippi self-filing assessment scores whether this estate can be handled without one.
A simple Mississippi probate typically closes in 6–12 months; average estates run 12–18 months. The mandatory creditor-claim period accounts for much of that, so even uncontested estates rarely close quickly.
A revocable living trust skips probate entirely — no filing fee, no attorney schedule, no executor commission. The cost of setting up the trust is typically recovered many times over compared to what probate would cost the estate. Create a revocable trust online and keep the estate out of Coahoma County probate.
Each institution has a separate death claim process. Find yours below.
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Probate fee bases vary by state and may use gross estate, personal property, inventory value, or net property after debts. This calculator provides educational estimates only and does not constitute legal or financial advice. Actual costs vary significantly by county, attorney, and estate complexity. Consult a licensed attorney in your state for guidance specific to your situation.
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Cost comparison vs. hiring an attorney
This tool provides general information about self-filing probate and is not legal advice. Consult a licensed attorney in your state for guidance specific to your situation.