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Home→Tools→Self-File Probate Assessment→Tennessee→Maury County

Can You Self-File Probate in Maury County, Tennessee?

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 Maury County works best for straightforward estates with a clear will and few beneficiaries.

File at the Chancery Court, 1 Public Square, Columbia, TN 38401. Phone: 931-381-3690. Hours: Monday - Friday, 8:00 AM - 4:00 PM.

Maury County offers e-filing for probate matters. Tennessee E-Filing Portal available for chancery court probate cases. A recurring Zoom option is available for some Chancery Court proceedings.

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

Yes, you can file probate without a lawyer in Tennessee, though the process may require more effort depending on estate complexity.T.C.A. §§ 30-4-101 (act name), 30-4-102 (definitions: $50K threshold in subsec (9); personal-property-only restriction in subsec (8); amended by HB0337/Public Ch. 297, eff. 4/28/2023), 30-4-103 (45-day waiting period, bond rules, no creditor notice), 30-2-306 (publication; 4-month bar from first publication; 60-day actual-notice variant in subsec (b)), 30-2-307(a)(1) (claims barred unless filed within § 30-2-306(b) notice period), 30-2-310 (12-month outer bar from death), 30-1-201 (bond; exemptions for will waiver, PR-as-sole-beneficiary, unanimous adult-beneficiary consent, or bank PR per § 45-2-1005), 30-2-301 (inventory), 30-2-601 (accounting waiver), 30-2-606 (reasonable compensation). Cross-verified against 2023 Public Chapter 297 (publications.tnsosfiles.com/acts/113/pub/pc0297.pdf), tncourts.gov Small Estates clerk-conference guide (tncourts.gov/sites/default/files/docs/Small%20Estates.pdf, reproduces full text of T.C.A. §§ 30-4-101 to 30-4-104 as amended 2023), and TN General Assembly public chapter effective-date reports for 2025-2026 (capitol.tn.gov/Archives/Joint/publications/PublicChapters/): no 2025 or 2026 public chapter amends §§ 30-1-201, 30-2-306/307/310, 30-2-601/606, or Title 30 Ch. 4; probate bills SB0541/HB0906 (creditor-claim exceptions) and SB2290/HB2269 (pro se small-estate life-insurance filing) did not pass as of 2026-06-11. Re-verified 2026-06-19 against the official tncourts.gov clerk Probate Guide (tncourts.gov/sites/default/files/docs/probate_manual_final.pdf), which reproduces the current 30-2-306 (publication in subsec (a); 4-month/12-month claim bar referenced in subsec (b); affidavit of publication in subsec (c); notice excused if letters issued >1 yr after death in subsec (e)), 30-2-307(a)(1) (60-day actual-notice variant), 30-2-301 (PR-filed inventory), 30-2-601 (statement in lieu of accounting), and 30-2-606 ("reasonable compensation for services"). Current 30-2-306(b) confirmed present (cross-referenced by 30-2-310(c)(1) and the Probate Guide) — the 2005 Pub. Ch. 429 §5 deletion of the then-existing 30-2-306(b) was superseded by later re-amendment.Verified Jun 19, 2026 Many Tennessee courts offer self-help resources and standardized forms.

Court filing fees in Tennessee vary by county.T.C.A. §§ 30-4-101 (act name), 30-4-102 (definitions: $50K threshold in subsec (9); personal-property-only restriction in subsec (8); amended by HB0337/Public Ch. 297, eff. 4/28/2023), 30-4-103 (45-day waiting period, bond rules, no creditor notice), 30-2-306 (publication; 4-month bar from first publication; 60-day actual-notice variant in subsec (b)), 30-2-307(a)(1) (claims barred unless filed within § 30-2-306(b) notice period), 30-2-310 (12-month outer bar from death), 30-1-201 (bond; exemptions for will waiver, PR-as-sole-beneficiary, unanimous adult-beneficiary consent, or bank PR per § 45-2-1005), 30-2-301 (inventory), 30-2-601 (accounting waiver), 30-2-606 (reasonable compensation). Cross-verified against 2023 Public Chapter 297 (publications.tnsosfiles.com/acts/113/pub/pc0297.pdf), tncourts.gov Small Estates clerk-conference guide (tncourts.gov/sites/default/files/docs/Small%20Estates.pdf, reproduces full text of T.C.A. §§ 30-4-101 to 30-4-104 as amended 2023), and TN General Assembly public chapter effective-date reports for 2025-2026 (capitol.tn.gov/Archives/Joint/publications/PublicChapters/): no 2025 or 2026 public chapter amends §§ 30-1-201, 30-2-306/307/310, 30-2-601/606, or Title 30 Ch. 4; probate bills SB0541/HB0906 (creditor-claim exceptions) and SB2290/HB2269 (pro se small-estate life-insurance filing) did not pass as of 2026-06-11. Re-verified 2026-06-19 against the official tncourts.gov clerk Probate Guide (tncourts.gov/sites/default/files/docs/probate_manual_final.pdf), which reproduces the current 30-2-306 (publication in subsec (a); 4-month/12-month claim bar referenced in subsec (b); affidavit of publication in subsec (c); notice excused if letters issued >1 yr after death in subsec (e)), 30-2-307(a)(1) (60-day actual-notice variant), 30-2-301 (PR-filed inventory), 30-2-601 (statement in lieu of accounting), and 30-2-606 ("reasonable compensation for services"). Current 30-2-306(b) confirmed present (cross-referenced by 30-2-310(c)(1) and the Probate Guide) — the 2005 Pub. Ch. 429 §5 deletion of the then-existing 30-2-306(b) was superseded by later re-amendment.Verified Jun 19, 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 Tennessee probate calculator.

Can You Self-File Probate in Maury County, Tennessee?

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

Probate filings for Maury County go through the Chancery Court at 1 Public Square, Columbia, TN 38401. Phone: 931-381-3690. Email: larry.roe@tncourts.gov.

Maury County offers e-filing for probate proceedings. Tennessee E-Filing Portal available for chancery court probate cases. A recurring Zoom option is available for some Chancery Court proceedings.

Maury County doesn't have a dedicated probate self-help center, so confirm forms, copies, and appointment requirements with the court clerk.

Maury County publishes a Probate Procedures guide and an annual chancery court cost/clerk fee schedule: The Maury County Clerk & Master publishes "Probate Procedures for Maury County Chancery Court" and an annual "Chancery Court Cost Clerk fees" schedule (currently covering January 1, 2026 through December 31, 2026). Both documents are available through the Clerk & Master document center. Annual accounting must be submitted on the Clerk & Master template with a proposed order: Maury County provides a "Detailed Annual Accounting / Order Approving Accounting" template through the Clerk & Master document center for probate accounting submissions. The Clerk & Master office explicitly states it cannot tell filers what forms to file, how to complete them, or how to proceed.

For smaller estates under $50,000, Tennessee offers Small Estate Probate Act Petition that can avoid formal probate entirely.

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Tennessee Estate Planning Resources

In-depth guides covering Tennessee 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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