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Louisiana Succession Cost: Parish Court Costs and Fees

Louisiana is a civil-law state, so settling an estate is a succession, not probate. Costs depend on whether the estate uses a small succession affidavit, a judgment of possession, or a succession with administration, and on the parish clerk of court fee schedule.

Louisiana succession cost planning works best when it separates the no-court small succession affidavit path from a court succession. A small succession affidavit has no court filing fee; the costs are notary fees, certified copies, and parish recording. A court succession (a simple succession ending in a judgment of possession, or a succession with administration) requires a parish court-cost deposit set by the clerk of court.

Louisiana succession filing costs do not scale with estate value the way some states' fees do. The parish clerk of court sets the opening deposit, which commonly runs about $250-$600, and additional charges apply for later filings, certified copies, and recording. Confirm the current deposit and fee schedule with the parish clerk of court where the succession will be opened before budgeting.

Quick Summary

$0 court fee
Small Succession
Affidavit, no court filing
$250-$600
Court Deposit
Parish clerk of court
2.5%
Representative Pay
Of inventory (La. C.C.P. art. 3351)
$0 tax
Estate/Inheritance Tax
Repealed in Louisiana

Louisiana succession court costs are set by each parish clerk of court and do not scale with estate value. Opening deposits commonly run about $250-$600, plus recording and copy fees. Use these figures as planning signals, then confirm the current deposit and fee schedule with the parish clerk of court where the succession will be filed.

Probate Cost by Procedure

ProcedureEstate SizeCourt FeeTimelineAttorney?Best For
Small Succession by Affidavit$125,000 or less gross value, or any value if death was 20+ years agoNo court filing fee; notary, copies, and parish recording fees onlyOften a few weeksNo (often useful)Smaller estates, or any estate when the death was 20 or more years ago
Simple Succession (Judgment of Possession)No cap; uncontested estates that do not need administrationParish court-cost deposit, commonly about $250-$600Often 1-3 months when uncontestedRecommendedUncontested estates placed directly into possession without an administrator
Succession With AdministrationNo cap; used when an administrator or executor must actParish court-cost deposit plus later filing and recording feesSeveral months or longerRecommendedEstates with debts, disputes, an absent or incapable heir, or a need for authority

Additional Costs to Expect

Parish Court-Cost Deposit

Each parish clerk of court sets the opening deposit for a succession (La. R.S. 13:841 et seq.). The deposit does not scale with estate value, and some parishes charge a lower deposit for a small succession. Confirm the current amount with the filing parish.

About $250-$600 to open a court succession

Recording Fees

A judgment of possession or a small succession affidavit must be recorded in the conveyance records of each parish where the decedent owned immovable property to transfer title. Per-document and per-page charges vary by parish.

Commonly about $50-$150 per recorded document, per parish

Succession Representative Compensation

When a succession is administered, the administrator or executor is allowed 2.5% of the amount of the inventory as compensation, absent a different provision in the testament or an agreement among the parties. Family members often waive this fee. The court may increase it on a proper showing.

2.5% of the inventory value (La. C.C.P. art. 3351)

Notary and Certified Copies

A small succession affidavit is sworn before a notary, and families typically need certified copies of the affidavit or judgment of possession for banks, the OMV, and recording. Notary and copy charges vary.

Notary fees plus certified-copy charges

Attorney Fees

Louisiana does not use a statutory attorney-fee percentage schedule for ordinary successions. Many uncontested successions are handled for a flat fee, while administered or disputed successions cost more.

Flat fee or hourly; varies by parish and complexity

State Estate or Inheritance Tax

Louisiana has no state estate tax and no inheritance tax; the inheritance and estate transfer taxes were repealed for deaths on or after July 1, 2004. Federal estate tax applies only to very large estates above the federal exemption.

$0 (no Louisiana estate or inheritance tax)

Typical Total Cost Ranges

Small succession by affidavit
Notary, certified copies, and parish recording costs
Simple succession (judgment of possession)
About $250-$600 parish deposit plus recording and attorney fees
Succession with administration
Parish deposit plus recording, 2.5% representative compensation, and attorney fees
Estate with immovable property in multiple parishes
Add recording fees in each parish where the decedent owned property
Disputed or complex succession
Attorney, appraisal, bond, and court-review costs can exceed filing fees

Source Notes

Statute / Authority
Louisiana Code of Civil Procedure arts. 3351 and 3421-3434
Fee Source
Parish clerk of court fee schedules and court-cost deposits
Last Verified
June 2026
Notes
Louisiana has no statewide succession fee table. Parish clerk of court deposits commonly run about $250-$600 to open a succession, plus recording fees; small succession affidavits have no court filing fee. Louisiana has no state estate tax or inheritance tax (repealed for deaths on or after July 1, 2004).

Sources

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does a succession cost in Louisiana?

There is no single Louisiana succession cost. A small succession affidavit has no court filing fee, only notary, copy, and parish recording charges. A court succession requires a parish court-cost deposit (commonly about $250-$600), plus recording fees and, when administered, the 2.5% representative compensation and any attorney fees.

Why does Louisiana use succession costs instead of probate fees?

Louisiana is a civil-law state, so settling an estate is a "succession," not common-law probate. The costs are parish clerk of court deposits and recording fees rather than value-based probate filing fees, and an uncontested succession usually ends in a judgment of possession.

Do Louisiana succession fees depend on the estate value?

No. Parish court-cost deposits do not scale with estate value the way some states' probate fees do. The deposit is set by each parish clerk of court, and some parishes charge less for a small succession. Confirm the current deposit with the parish before filing.

How is a succession representative paid in Louisiana?

Under La. C.C.P. art. 3351, an administrator or executor is allowed 2.5% of the amount of the inventory as compensation, unless the will or an agreement among the heirs and legatees provides otherwise. Family members serving as representative often waive this fee, and the court may increase it on a proper showing.

Does Louisiana have an estate tax or inheritance tax?

No. Louisiana has no state estate tax and no state inheritance tax; both were repealed for deaths on or after July 1, 2004. Only the federal estate tax may apply, and only to estates above the federal exemption.

What is the cheapest way to settle an estate in Louisiana?

When the estate qualifies, the small succession affidavit is usually the least expensive path because it has no court filing fee. It is available for estates with a gross value of $125,000 or less, or any estate when the death occurred at least 20 years ago. Larger or more complex estates use a court succession.

Estimate Your Louisiana Probate Path

Use the Louisiana assessment and calculator tools to see which probate process may apply and what it may cost.