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Find out if you can handle probate yourself, see estimated cost savings vs. hiring an attorney, and get a step-by-step filing checklist.
Yes. Self-filing in Harding County works best for straightforward estates with a clear will and few beneficiaries.
File at the Harding County Probate Court, 35 Pine Street, Mosquero, NM 87733. Phone: 575-673-2302. Hours: Part-time office; the judge returns calls and emails as soon as possible..
Harding County doesn't offer probate e-filing. Confirm paper or mail filing rules with the Harding County Probate Court.
Harding County doesn't have a dedicated probate self-help center, so self-filers should confirm local procedures with the court clerk.
Yes, New Mexico offers informal probate procedures that are designed to be manageable without attorney representation.NMSA § 45-3-1201 (small estate $50K/30d; reverified 2026-06-11 against 2025 NM Statutes and SSA POMS GN 02315.069 — value of entire estate less liens/encumbrances must not exceed $50,000, 30 days elapsed, no PR appointed, may not perfect title to real estate; $50K threshold set by 2011 amendment eff. 1/1/2012, no later amendment found); NM Supreme Court form 4B-501 / NMSA §§ 45-3-801 to 45-3-803 (claims barred 4 months after first publication or 60 days after mailed written notice, whichever is later); NMSA § 45-3-719 (PR reasonable compensation); NMSA § 45-3-715(A)(21) and § 45-3-720 (attorney employment/compensation and estate-litigation fees); NMSA § 45-3-603/45-3-605 (bond not required in informal probate absent demand); NMSA § 45-3-706 (inventory within 3 months); NMSA § 34-7-14 ($30 probate court docket fee, repealed/reenacted by Laws 2023 ch. 44 § 11 eff. 7/1/2023, fee unchanged); $132 district court probate filing fee (NM judicial district fee schedules, nmcourts.gov, 2026-06-11); NMSA § 45-3-1205 (surviving-spouse homestead transfer affidavit, 6-month wait, $500K assessed-value cap)Verified Jun 11, 2026 The process is most straightforward for simple estates with clear wills and cooperative beneficiaries.
Court filing fees in New Mexico vary by county.NMSA § 45-3-1201 (small estate $50K/30d; reverified 2026-06-11 against 2025 NM Statutes and SSA POMS GN 02315.069 — value of entire estate less liens/encumbrances must not exceed $50,000, 30 days elapsed, no PR appointed, may not perfect title to real estate; $50K threshold set by 2011 amendment eff. 1/1/2012, no later amendment found); NM Supreme Court form 4B-501 / NMSA §§ 45-3-801 to 45-3-803 (claims barred 4 months after first publication or 60 days after mailed written notice, whichever is later); NMSA § 45-3-719 (PR reasonable compensation); NMSA § 45-3-715(A)(21) and § 45-3-720 (attorney employment/compensation and estate-litigation fees); NMSA § 45-3-603/45-3-605 (bond not required in informal probate absent demand); NMSA § 45-3-706 (inventory within 3 months); NMSA § 34-7-14 ($30 probate court docket fee, repealed/reenacted by Laws 2023 ch. 44 § 11 eff. 7/1/2023, fee unchanged); $132 district court probate filing fee (NM judicial district fee schedules, nmcourts.gov, 2026-06-11); NMSA § 45-3-1205 (surviving-spouse homestead transfer affidavit, 6-month wait, $500K assessed-value cap)Verified Jun 11, 2026 Self-filing costs typically include the court petition fee, publication costs. The filing fee is a fraction of total probate costs. See a full breakdown with the New Mexico probate calculator.
In-depth guides covering New Mexico probate laws, trust requirements, and estate planning strategies.
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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.
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