Should You Get a Trust or a Will in New Jersey?
Compare probate costs, trust administration fees, and digital signing options for your state.
Frequently Asked Questions
New Jersey uses reasonable compensation for probate fees, typically 2.4-3.9% of the estate value.R. 4:42-9(a)(3) (court may allow a counsel fee out of the estate in a probate action) and R. 4:42-9(b) (fee must be supported by an affidavit of services addressing the RPC 1.5(a) reasonableness factors; no statutory percentage); N.J.S.A. 3B:18-6 (attorney also serving as fiduciary)Verified Jul 14, 2026 A trust avoids probate entirely and distributes assets faster than the 6-9 month probate timeline.
Probate in New Jersey typically costs 2.4-3.9% of the estate value in attorney fees alone.R. 4:42-9(a)(3) (court may allow a counsel fee out of the estate in a probate action) and R. 4:42-9(b) (fee must be supported by an affidavit of services addressing the RPC 1.5(a) reasonableness factors; no statutory percentage); N.J.S.A. 3B:18-6 (attorney also serving as fiduciary)Verified Jul 14, 2026 All-in costs on a $500,000 estate run about $38,385. A revocable trust has a one-time setup cost and no probate fees. See a detailed breakdown with the New Jersey probate calculator.
No. A will must go through probate in New Jersey. However, estates with personal property under $50,000 may qualify for simplified probate, which is faster and less expensive than full probate.N.J.S.A. 3B:18-14 (corpus commissions: 5%/$200K, 3.5%/$1M, 2% over $1M), 3B:18-13 (income commissions: 6%), 3B:18-6 (counsel fee for attorney-fiduciary; no statutory attorney fee schedule), R. 4:42-9(a)(3) / 4:42-9(b) (counsel fee allowance out of the estate in a probate action, supported by an affidavit of services addressing the RPC 1.5(a) factors), 3B:10-3 (spouse/CUP/DP small estate $50K), 3B:10-4 (heir small estate $20K), 3B:22-4 (creditor claims 9 months from death), 3B:15-1 (bond — administrators required; testamentary executors generally exempt), 3B:3-17 / 3B:3-19 + 2B:14-1 (Surrogate admits will and grants Letters as Judge of the Surrogate's Court — no informal/registrar probate), 3B:14-23 / 3B:16-2 / 3B:17-2 (unsupervised administration after appointment), 22A:2-30 (filing fees $100 with letters/$50 without), R. 4:80-6 (beneficiary mailing notice within 60 days; publication only for unlocatable persons), R. 4:80-8 (creditor notice rule deleted July 27, 2006, eff. 9/1/2006). Statutes verified 2026-07-14 against lis.njleg.state.nj.us (current through P.L.2025, c.346); court rules verified 2026-07-14 against njcourts.gov.Verified Jul 14, 2026
Simple estates in New Jersey typically take 6-9 months through probate. Complex or contested estates can take 12-24 months or longer.N.J.S.A. 3B:18-14 (corpus commissions: 5%/$200K, 3.5%/$1M, 2% over $1M), 3B:18-13 (income commissions: 6%), 3B:18-6 (counsel fee for attorney-fiduciary; no statutory attorney fee schedule), R. 4:42-9(a)(3) / 4:42-9(b) (counsel fee allowance out of the estate in a probate action, supported by an affidavit of services addressing the RPC 1.5(a) factors), 3B:10-3 (spouse/CUP/DP small estate $50K), 3B:10-4 (heir small estate $20K), 3B:22-4 (creditor claims 9 months from death), 3B:15-1 (bond — administrators required; testamentary executors generally exempt), 3B:3-17 / 3B:3-19 + 2B:14-1 (Surrogate admits will and grants Letters as Judge of the Surrogate's Court — no informal/registrar probate), 3B:14-23 / 3B:16-2 / 3B:17-2 (unsupervised administration after appointment), 22A:2-30 (filing fees $100 with letters/$50 without), R. 4:80-6 (beneficiary mailing notice within 60 days; publication only for unlocatable persons), R. 4:80-8 (creditor notice rule deleted July 27, 2006, eff. 9/1/2006). Statutes verified 2026-07-14 against lis.njleg.state.nj.us (current through P.L.2025, c.346); court rules verified 2026-07-14 against njcourts.gov.Verified Jul 14, 2026 A revocable trust avoids probate entirely; distributions follow the trustee’s administration rather than a court timeline.
Yes. A will becomes a public court record once it enters probate in New Jersey. A revocable trust is a private document that does not go through probate, so the terms, beneficiaries, and asset details remain confidential.
Use the New Jersey probate calculator to estimate attorney fees, executor fees, court costs, and the probate timeline.N.J.S.A. 3B:18-14 (corpus commissions: 5%/$200K, 3.5%/$1M, 2% over $1M), 3B:18-13 (income commissions: 6%), 3B:18-6 (counsel fee for attorney-fiduciary; no statutory attorney fee schedule), R. 4:42-9(a)(3) / 4:42-9(b) (counsel fee allowance out of the estate in a probate action, supported by an affidavit of services addressing the RPC 1.5(a) factors), 3B:10-3 (spouse/CUP/DP small estate $50K), 3B:10-4 (heir small estate $20K), 3B:22-4 (creditor claims 9 months from death), 3B:15-1 (bond — administrators required; testamentary executors generally exempt), 3B:3-17 / 3B:3-19 + 2B:14-1 (Surrogate admits will and grants Letters as Judge of the Surrogate's Court — no informal/registrar probate), 3B:14-23 / 3B:16-2 / 3B:17-2 (unsupervised administration after appointment), 22A:2-30 (filing fees $100 with letters/$50 without), R. 4:80-6 (beneficiary mailing notice within 60 days; publication only for unlocatable persons), R. 4:80-8 (creditor notice rule deleted July 27, 2006, eff. 9/1/2006). Statutes verified 2026-07-14 against lis.njleg.state.nj.us (current through P.L.2025, c.346); court rules verified 2026-07-14 against njcourts.gov.Verified Jul 14, 2026
Whether a trust is cost-effective depends on estate size, property types, and New Jersey's probate costs. The New Jersey trust need assessment evaluates these factors against your specific situation.
New Jersey Estate Planning Resources
In-depth guides covering New Jersey probate laws, trust requirements, and estate planning strategies.




