Alaska · Estate Law

Alaska collection by affidavit handles personal property up to $100,000

Alaska Statutes — Collection of Personal Property by Affidavit

Alaska Stat. § 13.16.680

What the rule says

Under Alaska Stat. § 13.16.680, an Alaska successor can collect personal property of an Alaska decedent without going through formal probate, if:

- The total value of the personal property does not exceed $100,000 - The decedent has been dead for at least 30 days - No application for the appointment of a personal representative has been granted - The successor presents an affidavit

What this means in practice

Key practical points:

- 30-day waiting period. - $100,000 threshold counts personal property only. Among the more generous nationally. - Real property requires separate procedures. Alaska recognizes TOD deeds. - No court involvement for the affidavit procedure.

How this fits with AK's other tools

Alaska offers:

- Collection by affidavit (§ 13.16.680): Personal property up to $100,000. - Summary administration: For specific simple cases. - Informal probate: Streamlined formal procedure. - Formal probate: Court-supervised when warranted. - TOD deed (Alaska Stat. § 13.48 et seq.): Alaska recognizes TOD deeds.

What you can do about it

For a survivor of an Alaska decedent:

1. Calculate personal property value. Stay within $100,000. 2. Wait 30 days from death. 3. Prepare and present the affidavit. 4. Distribute property.

Who this affects most

Alaska's small-estate procedure is most relevant for survivors of Alaska decedents with modest probate estates.

Verified April 29, 2026. View the statute at Alaska Legislature.

How does this affect you?

See exactly where your family is exposed — free in 3 minutes.

Check your situation

See something that needs correcting? Let us know.

Submit a correction

This information is educational, not legal advice. For complex situations, consult a licensed Alaska attorney.