Nebraska · Small Estate

Nebraska Small Estate Affidavit:
How to Skip Probate for Estates Under $50,000

§ 30-24,129 lets you collect personal property without opening a probate case in County Court — if you meet the requirements.

When someone dies in Nebraska, not every estate requires a full probate proceeding in County Court. If the deceased owned $50,000 or less in personal property, Nebraska's Small Estate Affidavit (Neb. Rev. Stat. § 30-24,129) lets you collect those assets with a notarized document — no court, no attorney, no filing fee.

The Three Requirements

  1. At least 30 days have passed since the date of death
  2. The total personal property subject to probate is $50,000 or less
  3. No probate proceeding has been filed or is pending for the estate
Real estate does not qualify. Nebraska's small estate affidavit only covers personal property — bank accounts, vehicles, investment accounts, and similar assets. If the deceased owned real estate solely in their name, you must open full probate in County Court regardless of total estate value.

What Counts Toward the $50,000 Threshold?

Count: Personal property titled solely in the decedent's name with no beneficiary designation or joint owner — bank accounts, vehicles, investments, personal belongings.

Do NOT count:

Nebraska is not a community property state, so all assets solely in the decedent's name count at full value toward the threshold.

Qualifying and Non-Qualifying Examples

AssetValueQualifies?Reason
Checking account (no beneficiary)$22,000✅ YesPersonal property, decedent's name only
Vehicle (solo title)$15,000✅ YesPersonal property; total so far = $37,000
Savings account (no beneficiary)$11,000✅ YesTotal = $48,000 — under $50,000 ✅
Farm land (sole ownership)$280,000❌ NoReal estate — requires County Court probate
IRA with named beneficiary$120,000❌ N/APasses directly — not subject to probate

How to Use the Affidavit — Step by Step

  1. Wait 30 days from the date of death
  2. Obtain the affidavit form from the Nebraska Judicial Branch at supremecourt.nebraska.gov/self-help/probate
  3. Complete the affidavit stating: the decedent's name and death date; that 30+ days have passed; total personal property is $50,000 or less; no probate is pending; your relationship and entitlement to the property; and a description of the specific property claimed
  4. Sign before a notary public
  5. Attach a certified death certificate
  6. Present the affidavit directly to the asset holder (bank, DMV, broker)
  7. The asset holder must release the property — they are protected from liability under § 30-24,130
No County Court filing required. You present the affidavit directly to the institution — not the court. There is no filing fee. The institution is legally required to release the asset upon receiving a valid, notarized affidavit.

Nebraska vs. Neighboring State Thresholds

StateThresholdWait PeriodReal Estate?
Nebraska$50,00030 daysNo
South Dakota$50,00030 daysNo
North Dakota$50,00030 daysNo
Wyoming$200,00030 daysNo
Colorado$74,00010 daysNo
Kansas$40,00040 daysNo
Iowa$25,00040 daysNo

What If the Estate Doesn't Qualify?

If the estate includes real estate in the decedent's sole name, or if personal property exceeds $50,000, you must open probate with the Nebraska County Court. Nebraska's UPC allows informal probate — no court hearing required for uncontested estates. See our Nebraska Informal Probate guide.

Related Nebraska Resources

Ready to handle this yourself?

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