Alternatives to Hiring a Probate Lawyer in New Brunswick
Before you pay $350/hour, explore every legitimate alternative for NB estate settlement: structured guides, PLEIS-NB, the Public Trustee, and when lawyer help is unavoidable.
All articles about When Someone Dies in New Brunswick — Estate Settlement Guide.
Before you pay $350/hour, explore every legitimate alternative for NB estate settlement: structured guides, PLEIS-NB, the Public Trustee, and when lawyer help is unavoidable.
Surviving spouse in New Brunswick? The Marital Property Act gives you 4 months to protect your share of the home. This guide explains the election, the house transfer, and what comes next.
Named executor for an NB estate but you live in Ontario, Alberta, or BC? This guide explains the bond requirement, remote filing steps, and what you can't delegate.
New Brunswick's Devolution of Estates Act sets out exactly who inherits when someone dies without a will — and completely excludes common-law partners from intestacy.
An enduring power of attorney in New Brunswick terminates the moment of death. Learn what this means for executors, caregivers, and family members managing an estate.
Step-by-step guide to settling a New Brunswick estate yourself: probate forms, 2026 fees, Form 41 property transfer, CRA clearance, and when to stop and get help.
New Brunswick's Marital Property Act gives surviving spouses a 4-month window to claim their share of marital property. Miss it and the right is gone permanently.
Compare a structured NB estate settlement guide against hiring an estate solicitor. Know when DIY works, when it doesn't, and how much each option costs.
Learn what happens to Old Age Security payments after death, how to stop OAS and apply for survivor benefits, with timelines for New Brunswick families.
When does the New Brunswick Public Trustee step in? Learn about the $25,000 small estate threshold, their role in unrepresented estates, and how to work with them.
What happens to an RRSP when the account holder dies in Canada? Learn about named beneficiaries, spousal rollovers, probate bypass, and CRA tax obligations.