You've worked hard to build what you have. Your home. Your savings. Your retirement accounts. The last thing you want is for your loved ones to spend months: or even years: fighting through paperwork and court proceedings just to access what you intended to leave them.
That's exactly what probate can look like.
The good news? With some straightforward planning, you can help your family skip most of that hassle entirely. In this guide, we'll walk through five practical steps to avoid probate and simplify inheritance for the people you care about most.
If you’re wondering how to avoid probate and make inheritance simpler for your family, the good news is that there are several proven, legal strategies available.
What Is Probate (And Why Should You Care)?
Probate is the court-supervised process used to validate a will, settle debts, and distribute assets after someone passes away. It sounds orderly enough. But in practice, probate can be:
- Time-consuming : Often taking 6 months to over a year
- Expensive : Court fees, attorney costs, and executor fees add up quickly
- Public : Your financial details become part of the public record
- Stressful : Family members are left waiting during an already difficult time
For homeowners and pre-retirees in the 50–70 age range, understanding how to avoid probate isn't about "gaming the system." It's about protecting your family from unnecessary delays and costs.
Let's look at five clear steps you can take.

Step 1: Create a Revocable Living Trust
A revocable living trust is one of the most effective tools for avoiding probate. Here's how it works:
You create a trust document and transfer ownership of your assets: your home, bank accounts, investments: into the trust. The trust technically owns those assets, not you personally. But because it's revocable, you stay in full control. You can change it, update it, or dissolve it whenever you like.
When you pass away, your designated trustee (often a spouse, adult child, or trusted friend) distributes those assets directly to your beneficiaries. No court involvement. No probate.
Why it matters for you:
- You maintain complete control during your lifetime
- Your family avoids probate court entirely for assets held in the trust
- The process stays private: no public records
A living trust does require some upfront effort. You'll need to formally transfer assets into the trust (called "funding" the trust). But once it's set up, it works quietly in the background, ready to protect your family when the time comes.
💡 Plain-English Tip: Think of a living trust like a container. Anything you put inside that container passes directly to your loved ones: without the court getting involved.
Step 2: Establish Joint Ownership Arrangements
If you own property with someone else: especially a spouse: how you title that property matters more than you might think.
Joint tenancy with right of survivorship means that when one owner passes away, the surviving owner automatically inherits the other's share. No probate required.
For married couples, tenancy by the entirety offers similar benefits, with added protection from creditors in many states.
Here's what this looks like in practice:
- You and your spouse own your home as joint tenants with right of survivorship
- If you pass away first, your spouse automatically becomes the sole owner
- No court, no waiting, no legal fees
A word of caution: Joint ownership works well between spouses, but adding children or others as joint owners can create complications: like exposing the property to their creditors or unintended tax consequences. Talk with a professional before making changes.
Because of these risks, joint ownership should be reviewed carefully as part of a broader estate plan, not used as a quick fix.

Step 3: Designate Beneficiaries on Financial Accounts
This one is surprisingly simple: and often overlooked.
Most financial accounts allow you to name a beneficiary who will receive the funds directly when you pass away. These include:
- Retirement accounts (401(k), IRA, 403(b))
- Life insurance policies
- Annuities
- Some brokerage and savings accounts
When you designate a beneficiary, those assets transfer directly to that person. They bypass probate completely.
The catch? Beneficiary designations override your will. If your will says "leave everything to my daughter," but your IRA still lists your ex-spouse as the beneficiary, your ex-spouse gets the IRA.
Action step: Pull out your account statements and verify who's listed as beneficiary on each one. Update any that are outdated or missing. This small task can save your family enormous headaches later.
For a deeper dive on keeping your beneficiaries current, check out our Education resources.
Step 4: Use Transfer-on-Death (TOD) and Payable-on-Death (POD) Designations
Think of TOD and POD designations as beneficiary designations for assets that don't traditionally have them.
- Payable-on-Death (POD) accounts work for bank accounts, CDs, and similar assets
- Transfer-on-Death (TOD) deeds work for real estate in many states
- TOD registrations can also apply to vehicles and investment accounts
Here's how it works: You keep full ownership and control of the asset while you're alive. When you pass away, ownership transfers automatically to the person you named: no probate needed.
Example: You own a home outright. Instead of putting it in a trust, you file a TOD deed naming your daughter as beneficiary. You continue living in and controlling the home. When you pass, she inherits it directly.
Not every state allows TOD deeds for real estate, so check what's available where you live. But where they're allowed, they offer a straightforward, low-cost way to pass property outside of probate.

Step 5: Gift Assets During Your Lifetime
Here's an approach that's often overlooked: give it away now.
If you transfer property or money to your heirs while you're still alive, those assets are no longer part of your estate. They won't go through probate because they already belong to someone else.
Gifting can be helpful in the right situation, but it should never compromise your own financial security.
Benefits of gifting:
- You get to see your loved ones enjoy what you give them
- Smaller estates mean simpler (or no) probate
- It can reduce potential estate taxes for larger estates
Things to keep in mind:
- Large gifts may trigger gift tax rules (currently, you can gift up to $18,000 per person per year without reporting requirements)
- Once you give something away, it's gone: you lose control of it
- Gifting appreciated assets (like stock) may have capital gains implications for the recipient
Gifting works best as part of a broader plan, not a last-minute strategy. If you're considering significant gifts, it's worth a conversation with a tax professional first.
Why These Steps Matter
Let's be honest: none of us like thinking about what happens after we're gone. But taking these steps now can make an enormous difference for your family later.
Avoiding probate means:
✅ Faster access : Your loved ones can receive their inheritance in weeks, not months or years
✅ Lower costs : Less money lost to court fees, attorney bills, and administrative expenses
✅ More privacy : Your family's financial details stay out of public records
✅ Less stress : Grieving is hard enough without adding legal battles and paperwork
You don't need to do everything at once. Start with one step: maybe reviewing your beneficiary designations this week. Then tackle the next.
Small actions today create big peace of mind tomorrow.
Ready to Take the Next Step?
If you're thinking about how to avoid probate and protect your legacy, you're already ahead of most people. The key is turning that awareness into action.
At GoldenYears65, we help pre-retirees and homeowners like you create simple, practical plans: without the pressure or jargon. Whether you want to understand your options or build a complete strategy, we're here to help.
If you’d like help understanding which of these steps apply to your situation, we offer education-first reviews designed to bring clarity—not pressure.
Your family will thank you.
