Small Succession by Affidavit

A clearer path for qualifying Louisiana estates.

When a Louisiana estate qualifies, heirs may be able to use a small succession affidavit instead of opening a full court succession.

Capital Notary helps prepare and notarize small succession affidavits, organize heir and property information, and identify when title research or attorney guidance may be needed.

Call About a Small Succession

Small succession affidavits can simplify the transfer process.

A Small Succession by Affidavit is a Louisiana procedure for certain estates that do not require a full formal succession in court.

Once properly completed, signed, notarized, and recorded when required, the affidavit can help heirs claim or transfer assets such as vehicles, bank accounts, personal property, land, or a home.

The right path depends on the estate value, date of death, family facts, property involved, and whether a will exists.

Who may qualify.

Current law and facts should be confirmed before relying on a threshold or affidavit procedure.

Estate value
The estate may qualify if the gross value of the entire estate at the time of death is within the Louisiana small succession threshold.
Older date of death
The affidavit procedure may also be available when the decedent died more than 20 years ago, even if the estate value is higher.
Movable property
Bank accounts, vehicles, personal property, and similar assets may be handled through the affidavit when the facts qualify.
Immovable property
Land, homes, and other Louisiana immovable property may require recording the affidavit in the parish conveyance records.

The affidavit must be fact-specific.

A small succession affidavit is a sworn legal document. It usually needs the decedent's death and domicile information, marital status, surviving spouse details, names and addresses of heirs, property descriptions and values, each heir's interest, and sworn statements made under penalty of perjury.

What to gather before the intake call.

The preparation moves faster when family, property, and record details are organized first.

Decedent's full legal name, date of death, and last domicile.

Death certificate or other reliable death information.

Marital history and surviving spouse information.

Names, addresses, and relationship details for all heirs.

Any will, codicil, judgment, prior succession filing, or related court record.

Property descriptions, account details, vehicle information, and estimated values.

Parish where any immovable property is located.

Known title issues, missing heirs, family disputes, or uncertainty about ownership.

Family property may need record research first.

When land or a home has stayed in a family for years without a recorded succession, ownership can be unclear. A title abstract or public-record search may help identify prior owners, missing successions, recorded judgments, heirship documents, and what must be addressed before property can be sold, donated, mortgaged, or transferred.

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