In New Jersey, jointly held property and beneficiary-designated accounts generally pass outside of probate. Assets owned as joint tenants with right of survivorship, as tenants by the entirety between spouses, or with a named beneficiary (a life insurance policy, retirement account, or payable-on-death bank account) transfer automatically to the surviving owner or beneficiary by operation of law or contract. Only assets titled in the decedent’s name alone, with no surviving co-owner and no valid beneficiary, must move through the county Surrogate’s Court before they can be distributed.
That single distinction drives most of what happens after a death in New Jersey. It determines whether the family waits on a Surrogate, whether a deed needs to be re-recorded, and whether the firm’s real-property-heavy estates clear quickly or stall. Below is how an experienced New Jersey probate attorney actually thinks through it.
What “passing outside probate” really means
Probate is the court process for proving a will and authorizing someone to act on behalf of a decedent’s estate. In New Jersey, that happens through the Surrogate’s Court in the county where the decedent lived. When an asset already has a built-in transfer mechanism, the court is simply not part of the conversation. Nobody needs a court order to tell a bank to release money to the person the decedent named on the account.
There are two broad families of these non-probate transfers:
- Survivorship title. The way the asset is owned dictates where it goes. Joint tenancy with right of survivorship and, for married couples, tenancy by the entirety both carry an automatic transfer to the survivor.
- Beneficiary designation or contract. The way the asset pays out is set by a form. Retirement plans, life insurance, annuities, and POD/TOD accounts all pay the named beneficiary directly.
Both routes share one practical truth: the will does not control them. A New Jersey will governs only the probate estate. If a father’s will leaves “everything equally to my three children” but his $400,000 brokerage account names only one child as TOD beneficiary, that child takes the whole account regardless of what the will says. This surprises families constantly, and it is one of the most common sources of post-death conflict.
Jointly held real property: the heart of NJ estates
For a probate practice built around real-estate-heavy estates, how the deed reads is usually the first thing to check. New Jersey recognizes three relevant forms of co-ownership of real property, and they behave very differently at death.
Tenancy by the entirety (married couples)
When spouses or civil-union partners take title together, New Jersey law presumes a tenancy by the entirety unless the deed clearly says otherwise (see N.J.S.A. 46:3-17.2 and related provisions). On the death of the first spouse, the survivor owns the entire property automatically. Nothing about that house goes through the Surrogate’s Court. In practice, the surviving spouse records a copy of the death certificate to clear the chain of title, and the home is theirs outright. This is why a married couple’s primary residence frequently never touches probate at all.
Joint tenancy with right of survivorship
Unmarried co-owners — a parent and an adult child, two siblings, partners who are not married — can hold property as joint tenants with right of survivorship. On a co-owner’s death, that share passes to the surviving joint tenants, not under the will. New Jersey is important to understand here: under N.J.S.A. 46:3-17, a conveyance to two or more people is presumed to create a tenancy in common unless the right of survivorship is expressly stated. So the deed language genuinely matters. “To A and B” usually means tenancy in common; “to A and B as joint tenants with right of survivorship” means the survivor takes.
Tenancy in common
This is the one that does drag real property into probate. A tenant in common owns a distinct fractional share with no survivorship feature. When that owner dies, their fractional interest becomes part of their probate estate and passes under their will (or by intestacy if there is no will). For our estates this is the classic scenario: a parent and one child held the family home “50/50” as tenants in common, the parent dies, and that half-interest now needs the Surrogate before it can be sold or refinanced. Co-ownership is not the same as survivorship, and the deed is the only thing that settles which one you have.
Beneficiary-designated accounts that bypass the Surrogate
Outside of real estate, most modern wealth sits in accounts that pay a named beneficiary directly. In New Jersey these typically include:
- Retirement accounts — 401(k)s, IRAs, 403(b)s. The plan beneficiary form controls, full stop. A divorce decree or a newer will does not override an outdated beneficiary form.
- Life insurance and annuities. The death benefit is a contract paid to the named beneficiary.
- Payable-on-death (POD) bank accounts and transfer-on-death (TOD) securities. The named person collects on proof of death.
- Certain pensions and survivor benefits tied to the employee’s elections.
The recurring failure is the stale or missing designation. If the named beneficiary has died and no contingent was listed, the asset usually defaults to the estate — and now it is back in probate, the exact result the form was meant to avoid. Reviewing these designations during planning, alongside the will, is some of the highest-value work an estate attorney does. For a broader look at how account titling derails an estate, this overview of is worth reading.
When a New Jersey estate still needs the Surrogate’s Court
If, after accounting for survivorship and beneficiaries, the decedent still owned assets in their name alone, those assets form the probate estate. The personal representative opens the estate at the county Surrogate’s Court:
- With a will, the named executor applies to probate the will and receive Letters Testamentary. By statute, a New Jersey will generally cannot be admitted until the eleventh day after death (N.J.S.A. 3B:3-22), a short built-in waiting period.
- Without a will, an eligible heir applies to administer the estate and receives Letters of Administration; an administrator typically must post a surety bond.
New Jersey also offers simplified paths for very small estates with no will. Under N.J.S.A. 3B:10-3 and 3B:10-4, a surviving spouse or domestic partner, or other heirs, may collect modest estates by affidavit without a full administration, subject to the dollar thresholds set in those statutes. Real property, however, almost always pushes an estate past “small,” which is why our real-property files generally run through full administration rather than the affidavit shortcut.
Even a well-planned estate can leave one solely owned parcel — a shore rental, an inherited lot, a property the decedent meant to retitle and never did — that requires the Surrogate before it can be conveyed. If you are weighing how administration unfolds, Morgan Legal’s overview of is a useful companion, and their probate practice page covers parallel issues in another jurisdiction. For New-Jersey-specific guidance, see our own probate overview.
The spousal elective share: a limit on disinheriting a spouse
One thing non-probate transfers cannot do is quietly cut a spouse out. New Jersey’s elective share statute, N.J.S.A. 3B:8-1, gives a surviving spouse or domestic partner the right to claim one-third of the decedent’s augmented estate, subject to the conditions in the statute (including that the spouses were not living separately under circumstances that would have disqualified the survivor). Critically, the augmented estate concept reaches certain assets the decedent transferred during life and certain non-probate arrangements — so funneling everything into joint accounts or beneficiary designations does not automatically defeat a spouse’s statutory claim. This is a meaningful guardrail, and it is one reason coordinated planning beats piecemeal beneficiary forms.
How lifetime documents interact with these assets
Three planning tools shape what happens before death and shrink what reaches the Surrogate after it:
- Durable power of attorney. Under New Jersey’s Revised Durable Power of Attorney Act (N.J.S.A. 46:2B-8.1 and following), an agent can manage accounts and property while the principal is alive but incapacitated — but the authority ends at death. After death, only a court-appointed personal representative can act.
- Advance directive for health care. Authorized by the New Jersey Advance Directives for Health Care Act (N.J.S.A. 26:2H-53 and following), this document directs medical decisions and names a health-care representative. It has nothing to do with asset transfer, but it belongs in every complete plan.
- Revocable living trust. A properly funded revocable living trust under New Jersey law holds title to assets so they pass under the trust’s terms without probate. The phrase that matters is funded: a trust that was signed but never had the deed or accounts retitled into it controls nothing. For real-property-heavy estates, retitling the deed into the trust is often the single most effective way to keep the home out of the Surrogate’s Court.
Used together with accurate beneficiary designations and survivorship deeds, these tools let a family decide in advance which assets skip probate and which go through it deliberately. A short consultation can map your specific titling. When you are ready, our wills and estate planning page and our contact page are the place to start.
A practical checklist after a New Jersey death
- Pull the deed for every parcel and read the exact ownership language.
- List each account and confirm whether it is joint, POD/TOD, or beneficiary-designated.
- Identify assets titled in the decedent’s name alone — these are your probate estate.
- Locate the original will and note the eleventh-day waiting rule.
- Confirm whether a surviving spouse may assert the elective share.
- Determine whether the estate qualifies for small-estate handling or needs full administration.
Get the titling right and most of an estate moves on its own. Get it wrong — a tenancy in common where the family assumed survivorship, a beneficiary form that never got updated — and a clean estate turns into months in the Surrogate’s Court. The deeds and the designation forms, not the will, usually decide which one you get.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does a jointly owned house in New Jersey go through probate?
Usually not. If the house is held by spouses as tenants by the entirety, or by co-owners as joint tenants with right of survivorship, it passes automatically to the survivor and bypasses the Surrogate’s Court. But if it is held as tenants in common, the decedent’s fractional share becomes part of the probate estate and must go through the court.
Can my will override a beneficiary designation on my retirement account?
No. In New Jersey, a retirement account, life insurance policy, or POD/TOD account pays the person named on the beneficiary form, regardless of what your will says. The will controls only assets titled in your name alone. That is why outdated beneficiary forms are a leading cause of estate disputes.
Can my spouse be disinherited by putting everything in joint or beneficiary accounts?
Not entirely. Under New Jersey’s elective share statute (N.J.S.A. 3B:8-1), a surviving spouse or domestic partner can claim one-third of the augmented estate. Because the augmented estate reaches certain lifetime transfers and non-probate assets, simply moving everything into joint or beneficiary form does not automatically defeat the spouse’s statutory right.
What is the difference between joint tenancy and tenancy in common in New Jersey?
Joint tenancy with right of survivorship means the surviving co-owner automatically inherits the deceased owner’s share, with no probate. Tenancy in common means each owner holds a separate fractional share with no survivorship, so that share passes through the deceased owner’s estate. Under N.J.S.A. 46:3-17, New Jersey presumes tenancy in common unless survivorship is expressly stated in the deed.
Does a small estate in New Jersey still require the Surrogate's Court?
Sometimes a full administration can be avoided. Under N.J.S.A. 3B:10-3 and 3B:10-4, a surviving spouse, domestic partner, or other heirs may collect a modest estate by affidavit without formal administration, subject to statutory dollar limits. However, estates that include real property almost always exceed those limits and require full probate administration.
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