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.