Executor Expense Calculator

Estimate estate administration expenses an executor may need to record, claim back from the estate, or discuss with co-executors and beneficiaries.

Enter Estate Administration Costs

Expense Estimate

GBP 0

Enter costs paid or expected so the estate expense total can be itemised.

Official and admin costsGBP 0
Travel claimGBP 0
Property and valuation costsGBP 0
Professional and time claimsGBP 0
Claim typeReceipts needed
Region noteCheck fee
This tool is an expense record aid, not legal advice. Keep receipts, bank statements and beneficiary communications.

What Counts As An Executor Expense?

An executor may need to pay costs while collecting assets, valuing the estate, applying for probate or confirmation, maintaining a property, settling debts and distributing funds. Reasonable out-of-pocket expenses can usually be repaid from the estate, but the executor should keep clear records and separate personal costs from estate costs. This calculator groups common items so the total can be discussed openly with co-executors or beneficiaries.

Executor expenses are not the same as executor remuneration. Personal time is usually not payable unless the will allows it, the executor is acting professionally, the court permits it, or all relevant parties agree. Because this area can become contentious, the time claim field is deliberately separate from out-of-pocket costs.

Record-Keeping Steps

1Keep Receipts

Save receipts, invoices, mileage notes and bank records. Put the estate name or reference on each document if possible.

2Separate Categories

Keep official fees, property costs, professional invoices and executor travel separate. This makes the estate account easier to check.

3Explain Unusual Items

Large clearance, repair, storage or travel costs should have a short note explaining why the expense was needed for estate administration.

Formula And Method

Official and admin costs = probate or confirmation fee + official copies and certificates + postage, ID checks and forms.

Travel claim = travel miles x mileage rate.

Property and valuation costs = property insurance and utilities + valuations, clearance and storage.

Professional and time claims = professional fees + personal time claim.

Total executor expenses = official and admin costs + travel claim + property and valuation costs + professional and time claims.

The calculator does not decide whether a cost is legally recoverable. It shows a transparent total so the executor can compare it with receipts, estate accounts, the will and professional advice where needed.

Worked Estate Expense Examples

Simple Bank-Only Estate

A small estate with bank accounts only may need official copies, postage and a probate fee if probate is required. Travel and property costs may be zero, so the estimate is mostly official administration.

Estate With Empty Property

An empty home can create insurance, utility, locksmith, clearance, valuation and safety-check costs. Those items should be recorded separately from the executor’s personal visits.

Professional Support Needed

If the estate has inheritance tax, overseas assets, a business, a dispute or unclear records, professional fees may be reasonable. Keep engagement letters and invoices with the estate papers.

Expense Categories And Evidence

For estate accounts, keep a running schedule with date, payee, amount, category, reason and receipt reference. This helps beneficiaries see that money was spent for estate administration rather than personal benefit. If two executors are acting together, agree how expenses will be approved before one person spends a large sum.

Where an expense benefits both the estate and a family member, write a short explanation at the time. Clear notes are far easier than trying to rebuild the reason months later when memories and paperwork have moved on.

CategoryTypical EvidenceCaution
Probate, confirmation or official copiesApplication receipts, court or registry confirmation, copy invoices.Use the current fee for the correct jurisdiction.
TravelMileage log with date, purpose, start and destination.Only estate administration trips should be claimed.
Property costsInsurance, utility bills, locksmith, gardening, safety checks, emergency repairs.Major repairs or improvements may need beneficiary or professional input.
Valuations and clearanceValuer invoice, auction fees, house-clearance invoice, storage receipts.Keep notes where sentimental or disputed items are involved.
Professional feesSolicitor, accountant, surveyor or tax adviser invoices.Check whether the fee is payable by the estate and whether beneficiaries should be told.

FAQ

Can an executor claim petrol or mileage?

Reasonable travel for estate administration may be claimable if properly recorded. Personal visits or unrelated errands should not be mixed in.

Can an executor charge for their time?

Usually not unless the will permits it, the executor is acting professionally, the court allows it, or the relevant parties agree. Get advice if this is disputed.

Are probate fees the same across the UK?

No. England and Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland have different processes and fee structures. Use the official source for the jurisdiction.

Should expenses be paid before beneficiaries receive money?

Estate debts, taxes and reasonable administration expenses are normally dealt with before final distribution. Timing can depend on the estate and legal advice.

What if beneficiaries challenge an expense?

Provide receipts, explain why the expense was needed, and seek professional advice if agreement cannot be reached.

Does this include inheritance tax?

No. Inheritance tax, income tax and capital gains tax are separate from executor expenses and may need HMRC forms or professional help.

Sources

  • GOV.UK. (n.d.). Applying for probate: Fees. HM Courts and Tribunals Service. https://www.gov.uk/applying-for-probate/fees
  • GOV.UK. (n.d.). Applying for probate. HM Courts and Tribunals Service. https://www.gov.uk/applying-for-probate
  • HM Revenue and Customs. (n.d.). Inheritance Tax. GOV.UK. https://www.gov.uk/inheritance-tax
  • Scottish Courts and Tribunals Service. (n.d.). Confirmation. Scottish Courts and Tribunals Service. https://www.scotcourts.gov.uk/taking-action/dealing-with-a-deceased-s-estate-in-scotland/
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