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Home→Tools→Self-File Probate Assessment→South Carolina→Greenville County

Can You Self-File Probate in Greenville County, South Carolina?

Find out if you can handle probate yourself, see estimated cost savings vs. hiring an attorney, and get a step-by-step filing checklist.

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes. Self-filing in Greenville County works best for straightforward estates with a clear will and few beneficiaries.

File at the Probate Court, 301 University Ridge, Greenville County Square, Suite N-T100, Greenville, SC 29601-3683. Phone: 864-467-7170. Hours: Monday - Friday, 8:30 AM - 5:00 PM.

Greenville County doesn't offer probate e-filing. Confirm paper or mail filing rules with the Probate Court.

Greenville County doesn't have a dedicated probate self-help center, so self-filers should confirm local procedures with the court clerk.

Yes, South Carolina offers informal probate procedures that are designed to be manageable without attorney representation.S.C. Code § 62-3-719 (PR compensation, 5% cap, $50 min), § 62-1-111 (attorney fees), § 62-3-1201 (small estate affidavit — $45K personal property, 30-day wait, no real property), § 62-3-1203 (summary administration — $45K), § 62-3-603 (bond not required by default in 4 enumerated cases; § 62-3-605 demand for bond), § 62-3-801(a) (8-month publication notice), § 62-3-803 (creditor claims — earlier of 1 year from death or § 62-3-801(a) period), § 62-3-203 (PR priority order), § 8-21-770(B) (graduated probate court fee schedule: $25 / $45 / $67.50 / $95 tiers, +0.15% over $100K, +0.25% over $600K); 2025 Act No. 26 / H.3472 (small estate + exempt property thresholds raised from $25K to $45K, eff. May 8, 2025). Verified against scstatehouse.gov 2026-05-05.Verified May 5, 2026 The process is most straightforward for simple estates with clear wills and cooperative beneficiaries.

Court filing fees in South Carolina vary by county.S.C. Code § 62-3-719 (PR compensation, 5% cap, $50 min), § 62-1-111 (attorney fees), § 62-3-1201 (small estate affidavit — $45K personal property, 30-day wait, no real property), § 62-3-1203 (summary administration — $45K), § 62-3-603 (bond not required by default in 4 enumerated cases; § 62-3-605 demand for bond), § 62-3-801(a) (8-month publication notice), § 62-3-803 (creditor claims — earlier of 1 year from death or § 62-3-801(a) period), § 62-3-203 (PR priority order), § 8-21-770(B) (graduated probate court fee schedule: $25 / $45 / $67.50 / $95 tiers, +0.15% over $100K, +0.25% over $600K); 2025 Act No. 26 / H.3472 (small estate + exempt property thresholds raised from $25K to $45K, eff. May 8, 2025). Verified against scstatehouse.gov 2026-05-05.Verified May 5, 2026 Self-filing costs typically include the court petition fee, publication costs, and bond premiums. The filing fee is a fraction of total probate costs. See a full breakdown with the South Carolina probate calculator.

Can You Self-File Probate in Greenville County, South Carolina?

Self-filing probate in Greenville County means working directly with the Probate Court. This tool evaluates whether self-filing is feasible for your estate.

Probate filings for Greenville County go through the Probate Court at 301 University Ridge, Greenville County Square, Suite N-T100, Greenville, SC 29601-3683. Phone: 864-467-7170. Email: probate@greenvillecounty.org.

Greenville County doesn't offer probate e-filing. Confirm paper filing procedures with the clerk before counting deadlines.

Greenville County publishes contacts for Estate Division, Marriage License Division, Involuntary Commitment Division — the right place to route probate questions before filing.

Estate pamphlets and forms downloadable from county website Online public case search at probateinquiry.greenvillecounty.org

For smaller estates under $45,000, South Carolina offers Small Estate Affidavit that can avoid formal probate entirely.

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South Carolina Estate Planning Resources

In-depth guides covering South Carolina probate laws, trust requirements, and estate planning strategies.

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