Where to file
Filed with the probate court handling the estate, in person or through eFileTexas.gov.
Legacywyse gives you everything a first-time executor needs: the recommended probate process for your situation, realistic costs and timelines, and pre-filled court documents — including the proposed order admitting will and authorizing letters testamentary.
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The draft order you give the judge to sign at the prove-up hearing. Once signed, it makes the will official and authorizes the court to issue Letters Testamentary — the paperwork that proves your authority to banks, title companies, and others.
Filed with the probate court handling the estate, in person or through eFileTexas.gov.
Judge signs.
No notary is required. Legacywyse plans include virtual notary sessions for supported counties.
This document belongs to 2 paths. The Legacywyse questionnaire sorts your estate facts first, then adds it to your packet when the path calls for it.
These are the county fees to open the underlying probate case, from each county's published schedule. For the cost of filing this document into a case that is already open, check the clerk's fee schedule. Fees change, so re-verify before filing.
| County | Independent Admin | Dependent Admin | Court |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dallas County | $388 | $388 | Dallas County Probate Courts |
| Tarrant County | $380 | $380 | Tarrant County Probate Courts |
| Collin County | $385 | $385 | Collin County Probate Court |
| Denton County | $385 | $385 | Denton County Probate Court |
| Harris County | $432 | $432 | Harris County Probate Courts |
| Travis County | $378 | $378 | Travis County Probate Court |
| Bexar County | $391 | $391 | Bexar County Probate Courts |
Filed with the probate court handling the estate, in person or through eFileTexas.gov.
Judge signs. No notary is required.
It belongs to these paths: independent administration, dependent administration.
Yes. Legacywyse generates it from your questionnaire answers inside the private workspace, with the county details filled in. You review it, sign where required, and file it. Legacywyse is not a law firm, and this page is general information, not legal advice.
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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