
Michigan Family Allowance During Probate
Michigan family allowance guide. Learn who may receive support during administration, how priority works, and why claim timing matters.
It is not legal advice. Verify current requirements with the county probate court, relevant agency, or qualified Michigan counsel before acting.
Michigan family allowance rules can give a surviving spouse and qualifying minor or dependent children support during estate administration. The allowance is separate from inheritance shares, exempt property, and many creditor claims.
This matters when the estate has bills. A personal representative should check family allowance before paying lower-priority claims or distributing property to beneficiaries.
Who May Receive a Family Allowance
MCL 700.2403 provides a reasonable family allowance for the surviving spouse and minor or dependent children during estate administration. If the surviving spouse is living, the allowance is payable to the spouse for the use of the spouse and the minor or dependent children.
If there is no surviving spouse, the allowance may be payable to children or to the people who have their care and custody.
How Long the Allowance Can Last
The allowance supports the family during administration. If the estate is not adequate to pay allowed claims, MCL 700.2403 says the family allowance may not continue for longer than 1 year.
That limit does not make every allowance automatic for a full year. The amount must be reasonable, and the probate court or personal representative may need to review the facts.
Priority Over Claims
The family allowance has priority over many claims, but not all of them. Under MCL 700.2403 and MCL 700.3805, administration costs, reasonable funeral and burial expenses, and the homestead allowance come before it.
After that, the family allowance can come ahead of later claim classes and general unsecured creditors. This is why the Michigan debt payment priority guide should be reviewed before payments go out.
Relation to Homestead and Exempt Property
The family allowance is one part of a group of Michigan family protections. The homestead allowance under MCL 700.2402 and exempt property under MCL 700.2404 may also apply.
These rights can be cumulative unless Michigan law, a governing document, waiver, or court order changes the analysis. Use the Michigan exempt property guide and Michigan surviving spouse rights guide with this page.
Practical Filing Notes
County practice can affect how an allowance is requested, documented, or approved. Keep evidence of family status, dependency, estate cash, monthly support needs, claims, and court orders.
If the estate has limited funds, do not rely on informal family agreement. The personal representative may need court direction before choosing between support, funeral bills, taxes, medical bills, and other claims.
Sources:
- Title: MCL 700.2403, Family allowance. Publisher: Michigan Legislature. Publication Date: Michigan Compiled Laws current through PA 14 of 2026. URL: https://www.legislature.mi.gov/Laws/MCL?objectName=mcl-700-2403
- Title: MCL 700.2402, Homestead allowance. Publisher: Michigan Legislature. Publication Date: Michigan Compiled Laws current through PA 14 of 2026. URL: https://www.legislature.mi.gov/Laws/MCL?objectName=mcl-700-2402
- Title: MCL 700.2404, Exempt property. Publisher: Michigan Legislature. Publication Date: Michigan Compiled Laws current through PA 14 of 2026. URL: https://www.legislature.mi.gov/Laws/MCL?objectName=mcl-700-2404
- Title: MCL 700.3805, Payment order when assets are insufficient. Publisher: Michigan Legislature. Publication Date: Michigan Compiled Laws current through PA 14 of 2026. URL: https://www.legislature.mi.gov/Laws/MCL?objectName=mcl-700-3805
This guide provides general Michigan family-allowance information. Ask the county probate court or a Michigan probate attorney before requesting, paying, or contesting an allowance.



