What Is the Estate's Personal Property Worth for Probate in Rhode Island?
Estimate the fair market value of household items for the Rhode Island estate inventory — what furniture, electronics, and appliances would sell for today, not what was paid.
Frequently Asked Questions
Personal property in Rhode Island is valued at fair market value — what the item would sell for on the open market, not the original purchase price.R.I. Gen. Laws § 33-22-21, § 33-24-1 (small estate), § 33-9-1, § 33-17-1/§ 33-17-4 (bond), § 33-14-8, § 33-11-5 (creditor claims), § 33-22-11 (publication) — verified via webserver.rilegislature.gov 2026-07-14Verified Jul 14, 2026 Most household items (furniture, electronics, clothing) lose 50-90% of their value. Professional appraisals are used for art, collectibles, jewelry, and other high-value items.
No. Executors in Rhode Island can typically group low-value household goods into a single line on the inventory — for example, "household furnishings and personal effects" — while valuable items such as jewelry, art, and collectibles are listed individually. Each value reflects fair market value as of the date of death.
In Rhode Island, the executor must file the estate inventory within 3 months of appointment.R.I. Gen. Laws §§ 33-9-1, 33-9-4Verified Jul 14, 2026
Estates with personal property under $15,000 in Rhode Island may qualify for Voluntary Administration, which avoids full probate.R.I. Gen. Laws § 33-22-21, § 33-24-1 (small estate), § 33-9-1, § 33-17-1/§ 33-17-4 (bond), § 33-14-8, § 33-11-5 (creditor claims), § 33-22-11 (publication) — verified via webserver.rilegislature.gov 2026-07-14Verified Jul 14, 2026 Accurate valuation at fair market value can determine whether the estate falls below this threshold. Check eligibility with the Rhode Island probate need checker.
High-value items such as art, antiques, jewelry, and collectibles typically require professional appraisals, while typical household items — furniture, electronics, appliances, clothing — can be valued using comparable sales data. Rhode Island requires a formal appraisal of estate property.R.I. Gen. Laws §§ 33-9-1, 33-9-4Verified Jul 14, 2026
Once the inventory is filed, tangible personal property in Rhode Island passes under any specific gifts in the will, then under the will's residuary clause. Without a will, it passes under Rhode Island intestate succession. See who receives it with the Rhode Island inheritance calculator.
Not necessarily. Items with named beneficiaries (life insurance, retirement accounts), jointly held property, and assets in a trust bypass probate. Only personal property owned solely by the deceased passes through probate in Rhode Island. The Rhode Island probate need checker determines which assets require probate.
Rhode Island Estate Planning Resources
In-depth guides covering Rhode Island probate laws, trust requirements, and estate planning strategies.

