For many families, probate is a necessary process to unlock your inheritance in Ontario. When we pass, regardless of whether we have a Will, we need to apply to the Court for a probate approval certificate before we can inherit most types of assets, such as real estate, bank accounts, vehicles, and companies solely owned by the deceased.
When applying for probate, the Court needs to know the dollar amount of the total estate value. This is because a 1.5% estate administration taxes need to be paid on the total estate value, with the first $50,000 being tax free. So if the total estate value is 1 million, then the 1.5% tax is $14,250. In most cases, this tax needs to be paid before the Court is willing to issue a probate certificate. This means the executor needs to either pay this out of their own pocket and be reimbursed from the estate later, or the executor need to apply to the bank and get this paid out of the deceased’s accounts.
Determining how much is the exact total estate value can be a lot of hard work. A realtor or real estate appraiser need to value the real estate property. The banks need to provide the date of death balance. A business appraiser may need to be called in to value the business.
Most importantly, determining this value Is much harder, if not outright impossible, if probate is done years after the deceased has passed away. Recently we had a case where the wife applied for probate only 1 year after the husband passed away. The husband owned a house under his sole name, and several bank accounts. After we helped her contact several real estate appraisers, they all said that they can only provide the house value as of 2026 and not as of 2025, being his year of death. This is because they cannot confirm the house condition back then. So if the 2026 value means the wife now need to pay a much higher estate administration tax, there is nothing we can do unless she can miraculously find another way to establish house value back in 2025.
The banks similarly gave her a hard time. While the bank can immediately print bank balances for the most recent 3 months, to provide old statements from 1 year prior would require going to their estate department and many more weeks of waiting.
The morale of this story is to apply for probate immediately (ideally within one month) after a family member has passed away. As well, early probate application means that the wife only needs to manage her husband’s real estate property and pay its property taxes, common expenses, and maintenance fees for 1 year instead for several years because probate began late.
While starting probate may seem daunting, especially at such a hard time in everyone’s life, it can be easy and smooth with the right estate law firm. Book a 1st free consultation with us by click HERE to learn more.


