Probate and the Decedent’s Debts: A Miami Creditor-Claims Checklist

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One of the most important jobs in a Miami probate is dealing with the decedent’s debts the right way. Florida gives creditors a defined window to come forward and gives personal representatives tools to cut off stale claims, but only if you follow the steps. Here is a checklist for handling estate debts without putting yourself at risk.

Step 1: Understand Who Pays the Debts

In Florida, the decedent’s debts are generally paid from the estate’s assets, not from the heirs’ own pockets. Beneficiaries do not personally inherit Grandma’s credit-card balance. The estate pays valid claims first; whatever is left goes to beneficiaries.

Step 2: Publish and Serve the Notice to Creditors

This is the engine that starts the clock.

  • Publish a Notice to Creditors once a week for two consecutive weeks in a Miami-Dade newspaper that handles legal notices.
  • Serve the notice directly on any creditor you know about or can reasonably discover. Skipping a known creditor can keep that claim alive longer.

Step 3: Track the Claim Deadlines

Florida sets firm outer limits on when creditors can file.

  • A creditor generally must file within 3 months after the first publication of notice.
  • A known, served creditor gets at least 30 days from being served, if that is later.
  • Florida law also imposes an outside time limit measured from the date of death that bars most claims regardless of notice.

Calendar each deadline. Late claims are usually barred unless the court grants an extension for good cause.

Step 4: Review Each Claim Before Paying

Do not pay claims on autopilot. For each Statement of Claim filed in the Miami-Dade probate file:

  • Confirm the debt is real and properly documented.
  • Object in writing within the deadline if the claim is invalid, inflated, or already paid. Missing the objection window can leave you stuck with a bad claim.

Step 5: Pay in the Correct Priority Order

If the estate cannot cover everything, Florida law dictates the order of payment. Generally, administration costs and funeral expenses rank high, followed by certain taxes and other classes, with general creditors lower down. Paying a low-priority creditor ahead of a high-priority one can make the personal representative personally responsible for the shortfall.

Step 6: Protect Exempt and Homestead Property

Florida’s constitutional homestead protection shields the Miami homestead from most creditors, and certain personal property is exempt. These assets often cannot be reached to pay general debts, which can change the math on which creditors get paid.

Step 7: Document Everything Before Distributing

Resolve or bar all claims before distributing to beneficiaries. Keep proof of publication, service, objections, and payments. This record is what discharges you when the estate closes. One relief for families: Florida has no state inheritance or estate tax, so the state itself is not a death-tax creditor of the estate.

Consult a Florida Attorney

Notice, deadlines, objections, and payment priority are technical and time-sensitive in Florida probate. Because a misstep can become your personal liability, work with a licensed Florida probate attorney familiar with Miami-Dade procedures. This article is general information, not legal advice.

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For more on our Florida practice, see our overview of probate in Palm Beach. Morgan Legal Group's affiliated New York office also handles .

DISCLAIMER: The information provided in this blog is for informational purposes only and should not be considered legal advice. The content of this blog may not reflect the most current legal developments. No attorney-client relationship is formed by reading this blog or contacting Morgan Legal Group PLLP.

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