Hi everyone, this is Sabrina from Varity Law. I chose to specialize in Wills and Estates law after my mother passed away when I was still young. Both personally and professionally, I understand how hard it is to navigate this complicated process during your darkest days. Many beneficiaries know they are entitled to an Ontario inheritance under a Will or Ontario estate law, but have no clue what actually needs to happen before they receive it. In this article, I’ve compiled an easy-to-read, step-by-step guide on how to claim your Ontario inheritance. It not only explains how the Ontario inheritance process works, but also emphasizes which steps should be handled first and which can wait until later.
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Check for life insurance and other death benefits
Check the deceased’s mail to see if they purchased any life insurance, or any other insurance with death benefits (e.g. dividend insurance, insurance purchased through their employer, etc.). The designated beneficiaries on those policies can receive the death benefit as quickly as 5 – 10 business days of filing a claim. Remember to include a copy of the death certificate. This can be used for immediate costs such as funeral, probate legal fees, and costs related to maintenance of the estate property (e.g. property tax, common expenses, repairs, etc.)
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Check for joint accounts and registered accounts with designated beneficiaries
By yourself or through your probate lawyer, notify the bank of the deceased’s passing, and check for the existence of any registered accounts (TFSA, RRSP, RRIF) with designated beneficiaries. Again, the beneficiaries can withdraw this money within 5-10 business days to cover immediate expenses. In addition, the bank will freeze all accounts in the deceased’s sole name. This is good for ensuring there is no unauthorized access or automatic withdrawals from the deceased’s account. But it’s also bad because it will stop all mortgage payments to the estate property. This means the mortgage would go into default, and the bank could start the power of sale. So you want to start step #3 immediately.
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Submit a Probate Application to the Court
Hire a probate lawyer to file a probate application. Once approved, this will unfreeze all assets in the deceased’s sole name. This includes bank accounts, real estate properties, vehicles, investments, etc. The probate lawyer could also help verify the total estate value by checking the date-of-death balance with banks, coordinating real estate and vehicle appraisals, etc.
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Work with an Estate Lawyer to Lower the Risk of Bond Insurance
If there is NO Will, work with the probate lawyer to request that the Court NOT require bond insurance. This costs 5% of the entire estate value and can be requested by the Court whenever it is uncertain who the beneficiaries are. When there is no Will, this uncertainty often arises.
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Pay the Estate Administration Tax
At the time of submitting a probate application, a 1.5% estate administration tax is required to be paid by the executor. If the executor does not have these funds, they can ask their probate lawyer to request that the bank pay from the deceased’s bank accounts. Formal documents and affidavits are often required by the bank to issue the bank draft to cover this fee.
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After probate, gather assets and open an estate account
When Varity Law is hired to do probate, we can usually get approval for probate with a will within 1 – 3 months, and probate without a will within 4 – 8 months. With the approval, the executor can go to the bank and open an estate account. Then, centralize all of the deceased’s assets into this one account. This money can now be freely accessed by the executor, so he/she must maintain proper bookkeeping of all deposits into and withdrawals from the estate account. This record is often required by CRA when filing for the deceased’s estate trust taxes and by beneficiaries to verify they received the correct amount of inheritance.
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File taxes and pay debts
The executor should file for Estate Administration Taxes with their probate lawyer, and the deceased’s terminal income taxes and estate trust taxes with their accountant. An interim distribution of inheritance can be made to the beneficiaries, but the executor should hold back at least 25% of the estate to pay for any taxes owing.
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Distribute the estate properly among beneficiaries
After all debts and taxes are paid, the estate is clean and ready to be fully distributed to the beneficiaries! There is no inheritance tax in Ontario, so this is likely the highest amount of tax-free money that the beneficiaries would receive in their lifetime.
Total time to complete without a lawyer: typically 2-5 years
Total time to complete with Varity Law: usually 6 months – 1 year
Total cost with a Will: approx. $2500 – $5000
Total cost without a Will: approx. $5000 – $30,000
If you have any questions about estate planning, probate applications, and estate administration, please click HERE to book a 1st free consultation with us.


