New York City estates are governed by New York’s EPTL and SCPA, but administered through five separate Surrogate’s Courts — one for each borough — with the decedent’s borough of domicile setting venue under SCPA 205–206. What makes NYC estates distinctive is the dominance of co-op and condo ownership: a co-op is shares in a corporation plus a proprietary lease, not real property, which reshapes how title passes and forces executors to deal with co-op boards. This guide ties the law to the place, borough by borough.

If you live, own property, or have a loved one in any of the five boroughs, start here.

The five courts that serve New York City

Borough County Surrogate’s Court address
Manhattan New York County 31 Chambers Street, New York, NY 10007 (Help Center in Room 302)
Brooklyn Kings County 2 Johnson Street, Brooklyn, NY 11201 (Brooklyn Civic Center)
Queens Queens County Queens County Surrogate’s Court (verify current address)
The Bronx Bronx County Bronx County Surrogate’s Court (verify current address)
Staten Island Richmond County Richmond County Surrogate’s Court (verify current address)

All five operate under the SCPA (procedure) applying the EPTL (substantive law), and all five accept NYSCEF electronic filing — though the original will is still filed in paper. The Manhattan courthouse at 31 Chambers Street is the historic 1907 Beaux-Arts Surrogate’s Courthouse / Hall of Records at the corner of Chambers and Centre Streets.

Which court handles your estate? The domicile rule

The single most important NYC fact: your borough of domicile chooses your court, regardless of where your assets sit. A Surrogate’s Court in Brooklyn cannot probate a Manhattan resident’s estate even if the only asset is a Brooklyn rental. Under SCPA 205–206, domicile — your fixed, permanent home — controls. People with a city co-op and a weekend house can face genuine domicile disputes.

NYC property and asset realities

This is where NYC diverges sharply from the rest of New York:

  • Co-ops (much of Manhattan, parts of Brooklyn and Queens): You own shares in a cooperative corporation plus a proprietary lease, not real estate. At death, the shares pass through the estate (or a trust), and the co-op board must approve the transfer to the heir — financials, sometimes an interview, often months of delay.
  • Condos: Real property, but with managing agents and common charges the executor must keep current.
  • Brownstones and multi-family townhouses (Brooklyn, Harlem): Often dramatically appreciated, pushing estates into NY estate-tax cliff territory.
  • Two- and three-family homes (Queens, the Bronx): Mixed personal-residence-and-rental properties that complicate valuation and income.
  • Single-family homes (much of Staten Island): More conventional real-property transfers, closer to the suburban model.

Critically, New York has no transfer-on-death deeds, so a co-op or condo cannot pass by beneficiary designation — it goes through probate or a trust.

Local filing realities

NYSCEF e-filing is available citywide, but practical experience differs by borough. Manhattan handles a high concentration of large estates, meaning more SCPA 1404 examinations and longer contested timelines. Kings and Queens are high-volume courts — even routine, uncontested matters can move slowly behind the caseload. Each court runs a Help Center for self-represented filers, but staff explain procedure, not strategy. Filing fees follow the graduated SCPA 2402 schedule by estate value.

Three NYC quirks worth knowing

  1. The co-op board is an unofficial gatekeeper. No statute mentions it, but a co-op transfer can stall an otherwise simple estate for months while the executor secures board approval — budget for continued maintenance payments.
  2. The $50,000 small-estate cap rarely helps NYC apartment owners. Voluntary administration under SCPA Article 13 requires personal property under $50,000, and co-op shares count toward that cap, so most apartment-owning estates need full probate.
  3. The estate-tax cliff catches “ordinary” homeowners. A long-held Brooklyn brownstone or Manhattan co-op can push a family that never felt wealthy over the 105% cliff.

Neighborhoods across the five boroughs

NYC estates are grounded in real places — the Upper West Side, Tribeca and the Upper East Side in Manhattan; Park Slope, Bay Ridge, Brooklyn Heights and Bensonhurst in Brooklyn; Astoria, Flushing and Forest Hills in Queens; Riverdale and Throgs Neck in the Bronx; and St. George and Tottenville on Staten Island. The asset mix shifts as you cross neighborhoods — co-op-dense pre-war buildings on the Upper West Side, brownstones in Park Slope, single-family homes in Tottenville.

A worked NYC scenario

Maria, a widow domiciled in Astoria, Queens, dies with a will leaving everything to her two children. Her estate: a two-family home in Queens (real property), a savings account, and a small life-insurance policy naming the children directly.

  • Court: Queens County Surrogate’s Court (her borough of domicile under SCPA 205).
  • Probate: Her named executor files a petition under SCPA 1402, attaching the original will and death certificate, and obtains letters testamentary.
  • The life insurance passes outside probate directly to the children — the will doesn’t touch it.
  • The two-family home, as real property, transfers under the will; the executor records a new deed and addresses tenant/rental issues.
  • Estate tax: If the appreciated Astoria home plus other assets exceed 105% of the NY exemption, the whole estate is taxed under the cliff — a real risk for long-held Queens property.

Had Maria owned a co-op instead, the children’s transfer would also require co-op board approval — the single biggest source of NYC estate delay.

Mini-FAQ: New York City specifics

Can a Brooklyn estate be probated in Manhattan? No. A Kings County (Brooklyn) decedent’s estate is filed in Kings County Surrogate’s Court at 2 Johnson Street. Domicile controls under SCPA 205.

Why does my co-op take so long to transfer? Because co-op shares require board approval to assign — a private process outside the court that the executor must navigate on top of probate.

Does NYC have its own estate tax? No. There’s no separate New York City estate tax; NYC estates owe the New York State estate tax (and possibly federal).

Can I use the small-estate process for a co-op? Usually no — co-op shares count toward the $50,000 SCPA Article 13 limit, so most apartment estates need full probate.

Where to get help locally

To handle a New York City estate in any of the five boroughs, book a 30-minute consultation with Russel Morgan of Morgan Legal Group. Explore the pillars: wills, trusts, the probate process, executor duties, and your borough’s court. Informational only; not legal advice — verify current court addresses and fees before filing.

Have a question about your estate?

Talk it through with Russel Morgan — free 30-minute consult.

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15 Maiden Lane, Suite 905, New York, NY 10038 · (888) 529-1315
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