By the Templateez Team · Licensed Attorney · June 2026

Estate Probate Paralegal Intake Forms: What to Gather Before the First Court Filing

The executor walks in with a death certificate, a copy of the will, and a vague sense that there are bank accounts somewhere. That is roughly half of what a probate paralegal needs to file the petition, and about a quarter of what the court will eventually require before the estate can close. Everything the paralegal fails to gather at the first meeting becomes a phone call, a follow-up letter, and a delay — and in probate, delays have consequences because creditor deadlines, tax filing deadlines, and distribution timelines all run from the date of death, not from the date the attorney got around to asking for the information.

A probate paralegal intake form is the procedural backbone of the case. It captures the data that populates the petition for probate, the inventory, the accounting, the creditor notice, and the tax returns. Every field on the intake form corresponds to a line on a court filing or a tax form. Miss a field at intake, and you are chasing it down three months later when the filing deadline is next week.

Decedent information: the foundation of every filing

The petition for probate requires specific facts about the decedent. Your intake must capture every one of them in the format the court expects:

Fiduciary identification: who has authority to act

The person sitting across from you may or may not be the right fiduciary. Your intake needs to verify their status:

Governing instruments: originals, not copies

At intake, you need the original will and every amendment. Most states require the original will to be filed with the court. A copy raises a presumption of revocation in many jurisdictions.

Heirs and beneficiaries: every interested party

The court requires a list of all interested parties — everyone who would inherit under the will or under intestacy:

Asset inventory: the paralegal's core deliverable

The inventory filing is one of the most labor-intensive probate filings, and it starts at intake:

Debts and creditor deadlines

The estate is responsible for the decedent's debts, and the fiduciary must notify creditors:

Tax deadlines the executor doesn't know about

Most executors know about the final income tax return. Few know about Form 1041, Form 706, or the state inheritance tax return:

Why intake drives the entire probate file

A probate case is a series of court filings and tax returns, each built on the same underlying data. The petition draws from decedent information and fiduciary identification. The inventory draws from assets. The accounting draws from both. The tax returns draw from all of it. Every piece of data captured at intake feeds directly into a filing with a hard deadline.

The paralegal who gathers complete information at the first meeting saves the firm dozens of follow-up calls, avoids the missed deadlines that trigger court sanctions or tax penalties, and gives the supervising attorney a file that is ready for legal analysis rather than data collection.

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