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What to Do First as an Executor in New Hampshire

Updated

Start by securing documents, ordering death certificates, listing assets and bills, and preparing court, bank, family, and attorney questions without accessing or distributing estate assets before authority is clear.

The workbook is best suited to uncontested new hampshire estates in the first 1 to 30 days. It helps with documents, official links, bank prep, family updates, and attorney-ready questions, but does not handle court filing, legal conclusions, asset control, distributions, or creditor advice.

Its privacy posture is simple: no intake form, uploads, account numbers, social security numbers, or saved estate data.

First answer First Week: Organize Before You Act

The first week is about creating order, preserving records, and avoiding promises that depend on court authority or legal review.

Order or locate certified death certificates

Order or locate certified death certificates early, because official NH court materials identify certified death certificates as documents that may need to be mailed for estate processing. [5] [2]

Secure the original will and any codicils

Secure the original will and any codicils if they exist, and keep them separate from ordinary paperwork so they can be reviewed or mailed as required. [1] [5]

List assets, institutions, property, benefits, and bills

Create a working list of known banks, credit unions, brokerages, vehicles, real estate, insurance, pensions, public benefits, recurring bills, and family contact information. [1] [3]

Save date-of-death records

Save statements or other records showing assets as of the date of death when available, because inventory preparation depends on asset information and values. [1] [3]

Write down unclear questions

Write down open questions for the court or a New Hampshire probate attorney instead of guessing about legal rights, ownership, creditor claims, or distribution timing. [1]

Send a neutral family update

Send a family update that says what you are gathering and what remains pending, without promising account access, distribution timing, or legal conclusions. [1] [2]

Copy-ready checklist

First-week checklist

Use this as a working checklist. Fill the bracketed fields before sharing it with another person. [1] [2] [3] [5]

Fill-in slots

  • [fill: decedent full legal name]
  • [fill: date of death]
  • [fill: county or town if known]
  • [fill: open question]
Estate: [fill: decedent full legal name]
Date of death: [fill: date of death]
County or town: [fill: county or town if known]

- [ ] Order or locate certified death certificates.
- [ ] Secure the original will and any codicils if they exist.
- [ ] List known banks, credit unions, brokerages, vehicles, real estate, insurance, pensions, public benefits, and recurring bills.
- [ ] Save statements or records showing assets as of the date of death when available.
- [ ] Write down questions for the court or a New Hampshire probate attorney.
- [ ] Send a neutral family update that does not promise access, timing, or distribution.

Questions to carry forward:
- [fill: open question]
Court readiness NH Court Readiness

Use official New Hampshire materials as the source of truth, then turn anything unclear into a question for the court or an attorney.

Opening path orientation

Review official NH estate materials before selecting a with-will, no-will, waiver, summary, or attorney-reviewed path; the workbook should not decide the path for you. [1]

E-filing and mailing checklist

NH estate materials describe electronic filing for estate processes unless an exception applies, and identify original or certified documents that may need to be mailed to the Estates Electronic Filing Center. [2] [5]

Fee check

Use the current Circuit Court fee schedule and confirm fees directly with the court before filing; do not rely on stale screenshots or estimates. [4]

Inventory preparation

Start a working inventory list from official categories such as institutions, statements, vehicle titles, deed details, insurance, pensions, tax records, public-assistance records, and contact information. [1] [3]

Authority checkpoint Wait For Appointment Before Controlling Assets

A common first-week mistake is moving too fast with assets. Treat appointment authority as a checkpoint before control or distribution.

Before appointment, organize records and questions; after appointment, institutions may ask for the Certificate of Appointment, raised-seal copies, or their own forms. [2] [6]

Before appointment

Before appointment, organize records, secure documents, make lists, and prepare questions; do not assume you can access, close, transfer, distribute, or sell estate assets. [2]

After appointment

Official NH materials describe the Certificate of Appointment as the document needed to take control of the decedent's assets, and some institutions may ask for raised-seal copies or their own forms. [2] [6]

Bank preparation Prepare For Bank And Brokerage Questions

Banks and brokerages control their own deceased-customer workflows. Prepare for the conversation without promising closure or acceptance.

Before calling a bank, gather identity, appointment, death-certificate, institution, and account-context information, then ask the bank what its deceased-account process requires. [2] [6]

Documents to prepare before calling

Prepare a certified death certificate, Certificate of Appointment when issued, your government-issued photo ID, known institution names, partial account identifiers, and any institution-specific deceased-customer instructions. [2] [6]

Process question to ask

Ask which documents the bank requires, whether it has an estate-services team, and what secure delivery method it prefers before submitting sensitive documents. [2] [6]

Copy-ready script

Bank-contact script

Use this before sending sensitive documents. Replace every bracketed field and let the institution define its own requirements. [2] [6]

Fill-in slots

  • [fill: institution name]
  • [fill: decedent full legal name]
  • [fill: your role]
  • [fill: safest contact method]
Hello, I am contacting [fill: institution name] about the estate of [fill: decedent full legal name].

I am [fill: your role] and want to understand your deceased-customer or estate process before submitting documents.

Which documents do you require from an executor or administrator? Do you need a certified death certificate, Certificate of Appointment, raised-seal copy, photo ID, or your own claim or closure forms?

Is there a deceased-account or estate-services team I should work with, and what is the safest way to send documents?

Please reply using [fill: safest contact method].
Family update Send A Neutral Family Update

Family pressure often rises when the process is slow or unclear. Use wording that separates known facts from pending court, bank, and attorney questions.

A useful update says what is being gathered, what will wait for appointment or review, and how legal-rights questions will be handled. [1] [2]

Name the known work

Tell family members that you are gathering death certificates, the original will or codicils if any, and known account or property records. [1] [5]

Avoid distribution promises

Do not promise asset access or distributions before court appointment, inventory, debts, taxes, and other requirements are understood. [1] [2]

Collect legal questions for review

If a family question involves legal rights, ownership, debts, or distribution timing, collect it for court or attorney review rather than answering from memory. [1]

Copy-ready update

Family-update template

Use neutral wording so the update does not promise legal conclusions, account access, or distribution timing. [1] [2]

Fill-in slots

  • [fill: family member or group]
  • [fill: decedent name]
  • [fill: next update timing]
  • [fill: preferred contact method]
Hi [fill: family member or group],

I am gathering the documents needed for the New Hampshire estate process for [fill: decedent name], including certified death certificates, the original will or codicils if any, and known account or property records.

I am not accessing or distributing estate assets before the court appointment step is complete. Once appointment is issued, the court requests more information, or there is another clear update, I will send another note by [fill: next update timing].

If a question involves legal rights, ownership, debts, or distribution timing, I will collect it for court or attorney review rather than answering from memory.

Please send questions by [fill: preferred contact method].
Attorney review Pause For Court Or Attorney Review

These flags mean the workbook should stop being the main guide and become a question list for a New Hampshire probate attorney or the court.

Pause when facts are disputed, debts may exceed assets, ownership is unclear, or anyone wants distributions before authority, inventory, debts, taxes, and court requirements are understood. [1] [2] [3]

Dispute or litigation threat

Pause if a beneficiary or family member is objecting, threatening litigation, or disputing facts. [1]

Debt pressure

Pause if debts may exceed estate assets or creditor claims are already creating pressure. [1]

Minor beneficiaries, trusts, special needs, or business interests

Pause if the estate includes minor beneficiaries, trust questions, special-needs issues, or business interests. [1]

Real estate or cross-state property

Pause if real estate may need to be sold, transferred, or handled across state lines. [1] [3]

Unclear ownership or beneficiary status

Pause if account ownership, payable-on-death status, beneficiary designations, or title are unclear. [3]

Premature distribution pressure

Pause if anyone is asking for distributions before authority, inventory, debts, taxes, and court requirements are understood. [1] [2]

Common questions New Hampshire Executor FAQs

These answers match the structured data and use the same source list as the page.

What should an executor do first in New Hampshire?

Start by organizing documents and facts: order or locate certified death certificates, secure the will and codicils if any, list assets and bills, save date-of-death records, and write down questions before making legal or distribution decisions. [1] [2] [3] [5]

What should an executor prepare before contacting a bank?

Prepare a certified death certificate, Certificate of Appointment when issued, government-issued photo ID, known institution names, partial account identifiers, and any institution-specific deceased-customer instructions. Ask the bank what it requires before sending documents. [2] [6]

Source appendix Sources Used

Procedural claims should be checked against official sources and attorney review before public launch. This list is intentionally visible for AI discovery and human trust.

[1] NH Judicial Branch: Administering an Estate booklet

Official estate administration overview used for the broad sequence, document checklist, general timeline, inventory timing, six-month period context, and accounting context.

Official source. Accessed 2026-05-17.

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