Tarrant County Probate Courts
100 W Weatherford St, Fort Worth, TX 76196. Phone (817) 884-1415. Filing fee for this path: about $380.
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Dependent administration in Tarrant County is court-supervised probate through Tarrant County Probate Courts, with a filing fee around $380. Every material action, from selling property to paying claims, needs court approval. This path requires a Texas probate attorney in practice.
100 W Weatherford St, Fort Worth, TX 76196. Phone (817) 884-1415. Filing fee for this path: about $380.
$5,000-$20,000 all-in for this path, including the filing fee, certified copies, and notary work. Attorney fees push administration higher.
1-3 years for most estates on this path. Includes the citation period and a hearing on the court's calendar.
Dependent administration runs on frequent court filings and strict procedure. Don't attempt it pro se.
Include the jurisdictional facts, the decedent's information, the list of heirs, and a statement of assets and debts. Bring the proposed order for the judge to sign at the hearing.
The court appoints the administrator, sets bond, and issues Letters of Administration. The new administrator takes and signs the statutory oath before Letters issue.
Most dependent administrations don't allow a bond waiver. The premium usually runs 0.5-1% of the estate's face value, payable each year until closing.
Publish once in a Tarrant County newspaper (e.g. Fort Worth Star-Telegram, Commercial Recorder). Dependent administration requires it. Unknown creditors then have 4 months to present claims.
File the full inventory. Dependent administration doesn't allow an affidavit in lieu. Include the appraisement values and the list of claims owed to the estate.
Selling property, settling claims, and making distributions each need a court order. You must serve most filings on all interested parties first.
File one each year until the estate closes. The accounting lists every receipt, disbursement, and remaining asset.
File this once the debts are paid and the assets are ready to distribute. The court approves the final accounting before you distribute. The same order usually approves attorney fees and executor compensation.
Creditor notice runs once in a Tarrant County newspaper of general circulation, such as Fort Worth Star-Telegram or Commercial Recorder.
Lawyer referrals: Tarrant County bar association.
Filing fee for this path: about $380. Counties update fee schedules, so re-verify before you file.
Filing fees from each county's published fee schedule. Fees change, so re-verify before filing.
| County | Filing fee | Court |
|---|---|---|
| Dallas County | $388 | Dallas County Probate Courts |
| Tarrant County | $380 | Tarrant County Probate Courts |
| Collin County | $385 | Collin County Probate Court |
| Denton County | $385 | Denton County Probate Court |
| Harris County | $432 | Harris County Probate Courts |
| Travis County | $378 | Travis County Probate Court |
| Bexar County | $391 | Bexar County Probate Courts |
The Tarrant County filing fee runs about $380. As a reference range, total cost for this path lands around $5,000-$20,000 depending on certified copies, notary work, publication, and any attorney fees. Counties update fees, so re-verify before filing.
With Tarrant County Probate Courts, 100 W Weatherford St, Fort Worth, TX 76196, or online through eFileTexas.gov. The court's phone number is (817) 884-1415.
Yes. The court holds a hearing before appointing anyone and issuing Letters.
The reference timeline is 1-3 years. Tarrant County has 2 statutory probate courts, and each court's calendar affects the schedule.
Yes. Dependent administration runs on frequent court filings and strict procedure. Do not attempt it without a Texas probate attorney.
Updated July 7, 2026. Legacywyse links to Texas court, statute, tax, and county sources when a guide discusses filing, authority, taxes, or local probate process. The content is general information, not legal advice.
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