Since 2010, the Global Law Experts annual awards have been celebrating excellence, innovation and performance across the legal communities from around the world.
posted 5 hours ago
When a person dies without leaving a valid will in Singapore, their estate cannot be distributed until the Family Justice Courts issue a Grant of Letters of Administration. Understanding how to apply for letters of administration in Singapore is essential for the surviving spouse, children, or next‑of‑kin who must step forward as administrator, gather the deceased’s assets, settle liabilities, and distribute the remainder according to the Intestate Succession Act. This guide sets out the complete procedure, eligibility rules, required documents, filing steps via the eLitigation platform and Service Bureau, realistic timelines, and indicative costs, reflecting the 2026 operational changes to Service Bureau arrangements and the courts’ increased acceptance of digital death certificates and electronic grants.
A Grant of Letters of Administration is the court order that authorises a named individual (the “administrator”) to manage and distribute the estate of a person who died intestate, that is, without a valid will, or with a will that does not appoint an executor able and willing to act. The legal framework sits primarily in the Probate and Administration Act (Cap. 251) and the Intestate Succession Act (Cap. 146), both available on Singapore Statutes Online. Once the Grant is sealed, the administrator has legal standing to approach banks, the Central Provident Fund Board, the Housing and Development Board, and other institutions to collect and distribute the estate.
It is important to distinguish this process from a Grant of Probate, which applies when the deceased left a valid will appointing an executor. The table below summarises when each type of grant is required.
| Type of Grant | When required | Who applies |
|---|---|---|
| Grant of Probate | Deceased left a valid will naming an executor willing and able to act | The named executor |
| Grant of Letters of Administration (with will annexed) | Deceased left a valid will but no executor is named, or the named executor cannot or will not act | A beneficiary or other entitled person |
| Grant of Letters of Administration | Deceased died intestate (no valid will at all) | Spouse, child, parent, or next‑of‑kin in statutory order of priority |
If the deceased held assets in other jurisdictions, a separate grant or resealing may be needed in each jurisdiction. The Singapore grant covers assets located in Singapore only.
Not everyone may apply. The Probate and Administration Act and the Intestate Succession Act establish a statutory order of priority that determines who has the right to be appointed administrator. The court will generally follow this order unless there is good reason to depart from it, for example, where a higher‑priority person is a minor, lacks mental capacity, or has a conflict of interest.
| Priority | Who qualifies |
|---|---|
| 1 | Surviving spouse |
| 2 | Children of the deceased (including legally adopted children) |
| 3 | Parents of the deceased |
| 4 | Siblings of the deceased |
| 5 | Nephews and nieces |
| 6 | Grandparents |
| 7 | Uncles and aunts |
Where more than one person shares the same priority level (for example, two adult children), any one of them may apply, but the other entitled persons will usually be required to file a renunciation or consent. A person with higher priority who does not wish to act must formally renounce their right before a lower‑priority applicant can proceed.
Note for Muslim estates: the Intestate Succession Act does not apply to Muslim residents, whose estates are governed by Muslim law under the Administration of Muslim Law Act. An Inheritance Certificate from the Syariah Court is required before a grant can be obtained.
Before filing, applicants should confirm that they can produce the deceased’s death certificate. The Family Justice Courts accept digital death certificates downloaded from the MyLegacy@LifeSG portal or ICA, provided the PDF includes the unique reference number. If the death occurred before digital certificates were available, a death extract from ICA will be needed.
The steps below walk through the full application process, from initial preparation to receiving the sealed Grant. All court filings are made through the eLitigation platform, either directly (for law firm subscribers) or via the Service Bureau (for non‑subscribers and self‑represented applicants).
Who: Administrator (or instructed lawyer). Typical duration: 1–3 weeks.
Compile a comprehensive list of all assets and liabilities held by the deceased at the date of death. This includes bank account balances, CPF balances, insurance policies, shares, unit trusts, real property (private and HDB), motor vehicles, and any outstanding debts or liabilities. Write to each financial institution with a copy of the death certificate to request balance confirmations. For CPF, apply to the CPF Board for a statement of the deceased’s balances across all accounts. For HDB flats, obtain the title information from HDB. The resulting Schedule of Assets forms a key exhibit to the application.
Who: Administrator or lawyer. Typical duration: 1–3 business days.
Search the Family Justice Courts index to check whether any caveat has been lodged against the estate and whether any prior application for a grant has been filed. A caveat, if found, signals that someone objects to the grant being issued, the application cannot proceed until the caveat is resolved or withdrawn. Also search the Singapore Academy of Law’s Wills Registry to confirm that no valid will has been deposited. These searches are inexpensive and can prevent costly rejection at a later stage.
Who: Lawyer, or applicant with lawyer review. Typical duration: 1–2 weeks.
Prepare the Originating Application (or Originating Summons, depending on the procedural route) together with the supporting affidavits required by the Family Justice (Probate and Other Matters) Rules. Key documents at this stage include the Affidavit of Assets and Liabilities, the Administration Oath, and the Administration Bond (with or without sureties, as directed by the court). Templates and guidance are available in the Family Justice Courts Probate & Administration Toolkit.
Who: Law firm (as eLitigation subscriber) or applicant via the Service Bureau. Typical duration: Same‑day filing; Service Bureau intake may require a prior appointment.
Law firms file directly through the eLitigation portal. Self‑represented applicants attend the Service Bureau, which will process the e‑filing on their behalf. Following 2026 operational changes, the Service Bureau operates under updated arrangements, applicants should book an appointment through the judiciary website and bring all original documents and the complete set of drafted papers. The Service Bureau will process the filing and issue an acknowledgement slip with a case reference number. It cannot provide legal advice.
The Family Justice Courts recommend that the application be filed within six months of the date of death. Late filing is permitted, but the applicant must include an explanation for the delay in the supporting affidavit.
Who: Applicant or lawyer. Typical duration: 1–6 weeks (depending on the nature and number of requisitions).
After the Registry reviews the application, it may raise requisitions, written queries requesting clarification, additional documents, or corrections. Common requisitions include requests for missing asset valuations, corrected statutory declarations, or additional renunciations from higher‑priority entitled persons. Respond promptly and in the format directed. Delays in clearing requisitions are the single most common cause of extended timelines.
Who: Family Justice Courts Registry. Typical duration: 1–5 business days after all requisitions are cleared.
Once the Registry is satisfied, the Grant of Letters of Administration is sealed. In 2026, the courts issue electronic grants that can be downloaded through eLitigation. A certified true copy of the sealed Grant is the document you will present to banks, CPF, HDB, and other institutions to collect and transfer the deceased’s assets.
| Step | Who does it | Typical duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Compile estate inventory & Schedule of Assets | Administrator (or instructed lawyer) | 1–3 weeks |
| 2. Caveat & Will search | Administrator / lawyer | 1–3 business days |
| 3. Draft Originating Application & affidavits | Lawyer or applicant with lawyer review | 1–2 weeks |
| 4. File via eLitigation / Service Bureau | Law firm (subscriber) or Service Bureau | Same day; Service Bureau may require appointment |
| 5. Respond to court requisitions | Applicant / lawyer | 1–6 weeks |
| 6. Grant sealed and issued (electronic) | Family Justice Courts Registry | 1–5 business days after requisitions cleared |
The documents needed for a letters of administration application must be complete and properly formatted at the time of filing. Missing or incorrectly certified documents are the most frequent cause of requisitions and delays. The table below sets out the standard requirements.
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Death certificate (Digital Death Certificate or death extract) | Download the digital death certificate from MyLegacy@LifeSG or ICA. Courts accept the electronic PDF with reference number. For deaths registered before digital certificates were available, obtain a death extract from ICA. |
| Identity documents (NRIC / passport) | Clear copies of NRIC or passport for the applicant and all beneficiaries. Provide certified true copies if originals are not presented. |
| Marriage certificate / birth certificates | Proof of relationship to the deceased, certified true copies or digital equivalents. |
| Schedule of Assets | Detailed list of all assets (bank balances, CPF, property, shares, insurance) and liabilities, supported by documentary evidence such as bank statements and CPF statements. |
| Affidavit of Assets and Liabilities | Sworn affidavit by the applicant detailing the estate’s assets and liabilities. Follow the templates in the Family Justice Courts Probate & Administration Toolkit. |
| Caveat / Will search results | Evidence that searches have been conducted at the Family Justice Courts and the Wills Registry, include printed results or an affidavit of search. |
| HDB documents (if estate includes an HDB flat) | HDB title details and information on any existing mortgage. Note HDB’s specific requirements for ownership transfer. |
| Renunciations / consents | Formal renunciation by any higher‑priority person who does not wish to act as administrator, and consent from co‑beneficiaries where required. |
| Power of attorney / letters of authority (if applicant is overseas) | Where the applicant is outside Singapore, a power of attorney authorising a local representative. May require a sealed grant from the foreign jurisdiction. |
| Administration Bond (with or without sureties) | The court may require a bond as security. Whether sureties are needed depends on the estate value and circumstances, the Probate Toolkit provides guidance. |
The overall timeline for a straightforward, uncontested application typically runs between six and twelve weeks from the date of the first filing to the sealing of the Grant. Complex estates, those involving foreign assets, missing beneficiaries, contested claims, or incomplete documentation, can take significantly longer.
| Milestone | Typical timeframe |
|---|---|
| Pre‑filing preparation (inventory, searches, drafting) | 2–5 weeks |
| Filing to first Registry review | 1–3 weeks |
| Requisition response and clearance | 1–6 weeks |
| Grant sealed and issued | 1–5 business days after clearance |
| Total (straightforward estate) | Approximately 6–12 weeks |
| Total (complex / contested estate) | 4–12 months or longer |
The Family Justice Courts recommend that the application be filed within six months of the date of death. This is not a strict statutory deadline, but late applications must include an explanation for the delay in the supporting affidavit. Early preparation of the Schedule of Assets and prompt caveat searches are the most effective ways to compress the timeline.
The total cost of obtaining a Grant depends on whether you instruct a lawyer, the complexity of the estate, and how many requisitions the court raises. The table below provides an indicative breakdown. All fees should be verified against the current Family Justice (Probate and Other Matters) Rules and the Family Justice Courts Probate & Administration Toolkit before payment.
| Item | Indicative amount / range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Court filing fee (Originating Application) | Per Family Justice (Probate) Rules schedule, verify current amount | Varies by application type; check the Rules or the Probate Toolkit for the applicable schedule. |
| Service Bureau handling fee | Per current Service Bureau fee schedule | Charged per document or per filing, updated following 2026 Service Bureau transition. Confirm with the Service Bureau directly. |
| Certified true copies (CTC) | Per copy, refer to Probate Toolkit | You will need multiple CTCs of the sealed Grant for banks, CPF, HDB, and other institutions. |
| Lawyer fees (drafting, filing, requisition replies) | Typically S$1,500–S$6,000+ for uncontested simple estates | Varies widely by firm and estate complexity. Obtain a written fee quote before instructing counsel. |
| Caveat search / Wills Registry search | Variable, nominal per search | Check the Singapore Academy of Law and Family Justice Courts for current search fees. |
| Land title / HDB search fees | Variable | Required if estate includes property; verify with SLA or HDB. |
Singapore does not impose an estate duty or inheritance tax. However, the estate may be liable for income tax on income received up to the date of death, and the administrator should file any outstanding tax returns with IRAS before distributing assets.
Applicants looking at how to apply for letters of administration in Singapore in 2026 should be aware of several operational changes that affect the filing process.
The Family Justice Courts have enhanced the eLitigation Helpdesk and Service Bureau operations, including a transition to updated service arrangements. The practical effect for applicants is that the Service Bureau now operates under the new provider’s workflow, applicants should book appointments through the judiciary website rather than attending on a walk‑in basis, and should confirm the current Service Bureau location and operating hours before visiting.
Digital death certificates downloaded from the MyLegacy@LifeSG portal or ICA are now widely accepted by the courts without the need for a separately certified hard copy, provided the PDF includes the unique reference number. This reduces the administrative burden during the preparation stage.
The courts also issue electronic grants through eLitigation. Once sealed, the electronic Grant can be downloaded and presented to financial institutions. Early indications suggest that most major banks and CPF accept the electronic version, but some institutions may still request a certified true copy on paper, administrators should confirm acceptance before attending.
Practical checklist for 2026 e‑filing:
Knowing how to apply for letters of administration in Singapore, and preparing thoroughly before filing, can significantly reduce the time and cost of obtaining the Grant. The procedure is well established: compile a complete Schedule of Assets, search for caveats and existing wills, draft the application and affidavits in accordance with the Family Justice Courts Probate Toolkit, file through eLitigation or the Service Bureau, and respond promptly to any court requisitions. With the 2026 enhancements to the Service Bureau and the courts’ acceptance of digital death certificates and electronic grants, the process is increasingly streamlined for applicants who are well prepared.
Where the estate is straightforward and uncontested, the entire process typically takes six to twelve weeks. More complex matters, those involving disputes, foreign assets, or missing beneficiaries, will take longer and almost always require professional legal representation. In either case, early preparation and a complete set of documents at the point of filing are the most effective ways to avoid delays.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Mark Cheng at MARK CHENG LAW CORPORATION, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
Member
No results available
posted 3 hours ago
posted 6 hours ago
No results available
Find the right Legal Expert for your business
Sign up for the latest advisor briefings and news within Global Advisory Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.
Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.
Global Advisory Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional advisory services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced advisors, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.