How to Avoid Probate in Minnesota: Strategies That Work

Probate is the court-supervised process of distributing a deceased person’s assets. While Minnesota’s probate system is more efficient than many states, avoiding probate can still save time, reduce costs, maintain privacy, and allow beneficiaries to receive assets more quickly.

Minnesota law provides several effective tools for keeping assets out of probate. The right combination depends on the type and value of assets, family circumstances, and overall estate planning goals.

Why People Want to Avoid Probate

Strategy 1: Revocable Living Trust

A revocable living trust is the most comprehensive probate avoidance tool available. Assets transferred to the trust during the grantor’s lifetime pass directly to beneficiaries upon death without any court involvement.

How It Works

The grantor creates a trust document, names a successor trustee, and transfers ownership of assets into the trust. During the grantor’s lifetime, the grantor retains full control — they can add or remove assets, change beneficiaries, modify terms, or revoke the trust entirely. At the grantor’s death, the successor trustee distributes assets according to the trust terms, typically within weeks rather than months.

Advantages

Limitations

For a complete discussion, see the guide to revocable living trusts in Minnesota.

Important: The trust only avoids probate for assets properly transferred into it. A pour-over will serves as a safety net for anything missed, though those assets must still pass through probate.

Strategy 2: Transfer on Death Deeds (TODDs)

Minnesota is one of a growing number of states that authorize Transfer on Death Deeds under Minn. Stat. § 507.071. A TODD is a deed that transfers real property to a named beneficiary upon the owner’s death, without probate.

How It Works

The property owner signs and records a TODD with the county recorder’s office. The deed has no effect during the owner’s lifetime — the owner retains full ownership, can sell or mortgage the property, and can revoke the TODD at any time. At death, the property passes automatically to the named beneficiary.

Advantages

Limitations

For a full discussion of TODDs, see the guide to Transfer on Death Deeds in Minnesota.

Strategy 3: Joint Tenancy with Right of Survivorship

Joint tenancy is a form of property ownership in which two or more individuals own property together with a right of survivorship. When one joint tenant dies, their interest passes automatically to the surviving joint tenant(s) without probate.

How It Works

The property deed or account registration specifies that the owners hold title as “joint tenants with right of survivorship.” Upon the death of one owner, the surviving owner(s) receive the deceased owner’s share by operation of law.

Advantages

Limitations

Joint tenancy is most appropriate between spouses and should be used cautiously in other relationships.

Strategy 4: Beneficiary Designations

Many financial assets allow the owner to name a beneficiary who will receive the asset directly upon the owner’s death, bypassing probate entirely. These include:

Advantages

Limitations

Best Practice

Review beneficiary designations on all accounts at least annually and after any major life event (marriage, divorce, birth of a child, death of a beneficiary). Ensure that primary and contingent beneficiaries are named on every account.

Strategy 5: Payable-on-Death (POD) and Transfer-on-Death (TOD) Accounts

Payable-on-death designations on bank accounts and transfer-on-death registrations on brokerage accounts allow balances to pass directly to a named beneficiary at death. During the owner’s lifetime, the beneficiary has no access to the account. These designations are free to set up, revocable at any time, and bypass probate entirely.

The limitations mirror those of beneficiary designations: outdated designations can produce unintended results, and these tools provide no incapacity protection.

Strategy 6: Small Estate Affidavit

Under Minn. Stat. § 524.3-1201, if the total value of an estate (excluding real property and certain other assets) does not exceed $75,000, an heir or beneficiary can collect estate assets using a small estate affidavit without any probate proceeding.

Requirements

How It Works

The heir or beneficiary prepares a sworn affidavit stating that they are entitled to the assets and that the estate qualifies under the statute. The affidavit is presented to banks, insurance companies, and other holders of the decedent’s property, who are then authorized to release the assets without a court order.

Limitations

Which Assets Go Through Probate vs. Not?

Asset Type Goes Through Probate?
Solely owned real property (no TODD, no joint tenancy) Yes
Solely owned bank account (no POD designation) Yes
Solely owned vehicle Yes
Personal property (furniture, jewelry, etc.) Yes, if significant value
Joint tenancy property No
POD/TOD accounts No
Life insurance (with named beneficiary) No
Retirement accounts (with named beneficiary) No
Trust assets No
TODD real property No

Building a Complete Probate Avoidance Plan

The most effective approach combines multiple strategies: address real property with a trust or TODD, update beneficiary designations on all financial accounts, add POD/TOD designations to bank and brokerage accounts, and create a pour-over will as a safety net.

Even with comprehensive probate avoidance, a will remains important for naming a guardian for minor children, catching assets inadvertently left out of the plan, and providing a backup if other mechanisms fail.

For a comparison of wills and trusts as the foundation of an estate plan, see wills vs. trusts in Minnesota. For a broader overview of Minnesota estate planning statutes and recent changes, see Minnesota estate planning laws.