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Wyoming County Probate Statistics

Use this county view to check filing-fee patterns, e-filing access, and timing signals before you rely on a probate cost estimate or start preparing a petition.

Data quality: Medium

What This County Snapshot Covers

This page is meant to answer the fast operational questions first: what the county charges to open common probate proceedings, whether e-filing is available, how long creditor claims may run, and where to verify the court record.

0

Fee Rows Captured

No

E-Filing Available

12 mo

Creditor Claim Period

Medium

Data Quality

Official Sources to Verify

County Fee Schedule

Check the live filing-fee source before relying on a county average or cached amount.

Court Forms or Filing Portal

Review the county or court forms page tied to this probate workflow.

Case Search

Use the county case-search tool when you need live docket or estate-case status information. Search results may not include every probate record.

The county Register and Recorder section publishes resources, fees and requirements, and contact routing for Register of Wills and Recorder records, but no complete no-login probate index was verified. Treat this as official manual or paid record-request routing, not a complete online probate index, certified-copy workflow, or legal review.

Court Website

Go straight to the county probate court website for clerk notices and local instructions.

Filing Options

in person
mail

Filing Deadlines

Creditor Claim Period12 months

Court Information

Wyoming County Court of Common Pleas - Orphans' Court Division

1 Courthouse Square, Tunkhannock, PA 18657

Phone: 570-836-3200

Court Website →

Frequently Asked Questions

Are the Wyoming County probate fees on this page the full cost of the case?
Not necessarily. Filing fees are only one part of probate cost. Publication charges, certified copies, appraisal expenses, attorney fees, and other estate-administration costs may still apply.
What does e-filing status mean for Wyoming County probate cases?
E-filing status tells you whether the county accepts online filing and, when available in the dataset, whether attorneys are required to use it. That still does not replace checking the current clerk instructions before filing.
Why might a fee or deadline be missing?
Some counties publish fees in fragmented schedules, update procedures without a clean machine-readable source, or handle certain deadlines in local instructions rather than a simple statewide field. Use the county reference page and court website to verify anything missing.

Information current as of May 31, 2026

This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Probate laws and procedures in Pennsylvania can change. Consult with a qualified attorney for advice specific to your situation. Full disclaimer.