Probate Q&A Series

How do I know if a property is excluded from the probate estate inventory? – North Carolina

Short Answer

In North Carolina, property is excluded from the probate inventory if it does not pass through the estate—for example, assets that transfer by beneficiary designation or survivorship. Real estate usually vests directly in heirs or devisees at death and is not an estate asset unless the will gives the personal representative control or the court authorizes control to pay claims. Solely owned assets payable to the estate belong in the inventory; survivorship and beneficiary-designated assets do not.

Understanding the Problem

You’re serving as the personal representative in North Carolina and must decide whether certain real property belongs in the probate inventory. The inventory you’re about to sign and notarize lists some real property as excluded, and you’re also planning to sell farm equipment and coordinate tax filings through a family member. Your single decision point: should that property be listed as part of the probate inventory you file with the Clerk of Superior Court?

Apply the Law

Under North Carolina law, the probate inventory captures assets that pass through the estate or can be pulled into the estate to pay debts. Title and how the asset transfers at death drive the classification. The personal representative files the inventory with the Clerk of Superior Court within three months of qualification. Real property typically vests in heirs or devisees at death and is not an estate asset unless the will or a court proceeding places it under the personal representative’s possession, custody, and control.

Key Requirements

  • Check how title or payment works at death: If an asset is payable to the estate or titled solely in the decedent’s name, it is generally a probate asset. If it passes by survivorship (JTWROS, tenancy by the entirety) or beneficiary (POD/TOD, life insurance, retirement), it is nonprobate and excluded.
  • Handle real property correctly: Real estate usually vests in heirs/devisees at death and is not an “estate asset” unless devised to the personal representative or the court authorizes the personal representative to take control to administer or pay claims.
  • Use the correct inventory parts: List probate assets in Part I. List assets that could be recovered to pay claims (for example, certain jointly held accounts) in the “can be added if needed” section (Part II). Do not list entireties real property or life estates on the inventory.
  • File and verify on time: File the signed, verified inventory within three months of qualification; file a supplemental inventory if you discover new assets or need to correct values.
  • Report sales of personal property in accounts: Sales of probate personal property (like farm equipment) are allowed without court order; you must later account for the receipts and disbursements.

What the Statutes Say

Analysis

Apply the Rule to the Facts: If the real property on your draft inventory is owned with a right of survivorship or by the entirety, excluding it from the probate inventory is correct. If the decedent owned the real property solely or as a tenant in common, list it appropriately (typically in the “can be added if needed to pay claims” section) unless the will gives it to the personal representative or the court authorizes control—then treat it as an estate asset. The farm equipment is probate personal property and should be listed and, if sold, later reported in your accounting. Coordinating tax filings is fine, but it does not change what goes in the inventory; keep documentation for values and sales.

Process & Timing

  1. Who files: Personal representative. Where: Clerk of Superior Court in the county where you qualified. What: Inventory for Decedent’s Estate (AOC-E-505). When: Within three months of qualification; sign and verify before filing.
  2. Provide detail and date-of-death values. Classify each item: probate (Part I), recoverable-if-needed (Part II). Keep deeds, account statements, and beneficiary confirmations handy; some clerks may request proof of survivorship or beneficiary designations.
  3. File a supplemental inventory if you discover new assets or corrections. Later, report sales of personal property (e.g., farm equipment) and any use of nonprobate funds to pay estate debts on your annual or final account (AOC-E-506).

Exceptions & Pitfalls

  • Entireties real property and life estates are excluded from the inventory; do not list them.
  • Solely owned real property and tenant-in-common interests belong on the inventory, usually as property that can be added to pay claims if needed.
  • Joint accounts with right of survivorship and POD/TOD accounts are nonprobate; if you use any of those funds to pay estate debts, reflect that use in your accounting.
  • Mislabeling an asset on the inventory does not change legal ownership; correct via supplemental inventory if needed.
  • If the estate lacks funds to pay claims, you may need court authority to recover certain nonprobate funds; get advice before taking action.

Conclusion

In North Carolina, you include assets in the probate inventory if they pass through the estate or can be pulled in to pay debts; you exclude assets that pass by survivorship or beneficiary designation. Real property usually vests in heirs/devisees and is not an estate asset unless the will or court places it under your control. Your next step: complete, sign, and file Inventory (AOC‑E‑505) with the Clerk of Superior Court within three months of qualification, classifying each asset based on title and how it transfers at death.

Talk to a Probate Attorney

If you’re deciding whether specific property belongs in the North Carolina probate inventory, our firm can help you classify assets, plan sales of personal property, and meet filing deadlines. Call us today to discuss your options and timelines.

Disclaimer: This article provides general information about North Carolina law based on the single question stated above. It is not legal advice for your specific situation and does not create an attorney-client relationship. Laws, procedures, and local practice can change and may vary by county. If you have a deadline, act promptly and speak with a licensed North Carolina attorney.