What to Do When Someone Dies in Ohio
Step-by-step guide for the first days and weeks after a death in Ohio. This guide helps you work through immediate tasks, legal requirements, and important decisions.
Sources
- Ohio Revised Code, accessed 2026-02-08
- Ohio Legal Help, accessed 2026-02-08
If You Are the Named Executor in Ohio
If you are the named executor, personal representative, or the family member organizing an Ohio estate, start with the records and court tasks below at a steady pace. Each step links to its full instructions in the timeline.
We're sorry for your loss. Take time to grieve and ask for help when you need it. This guide will be here when you're ready.
Timeline of Tasks
Start with the immediate tasks. Open each later phase as you reach it.
First 24-48 Hours
First Week
First Month
Ongoing Tasks (3+ Months)
Who to Notify
Documents to Gather
Death Certificates
Many estates start with 10-15 certified copies because banks, insurers, property-transfer contacts, and agencies may ask for them.
How to get death certificates →Will & Trust Documents
Look in safe deposit boxes, home safes, attorney files, and records folders.
Probate guide →Financial Statements
Bank statements, investment accounts, retirement accounts, and recent tax returns.
Asset transfer guide →There is no rush on this. When you are ready, a short assessment can help you see whether probate is needed.
What Comes Next?
After the first 30 days, you may need to start probate or transfer assets. The Ohio probate guide walks through what usually comes next.
More Ohio Resources
Explore the rest of the Ohio probate hub.
Start here