Ohio has no state estate tax and no inheritance tax. So why do Ohio families still lose 3 to 5 percent of every estate at death? Because of probate itself. Here is what costs you money, and the six legal tools that move your assets around it.
Ohio repealed its estate tax effective January 1, 2013. Ohio has never imposed an inheritance tax. That is unchanged in 2026. If your estate stays below the federal threshold (currently $15 million per person, $30 million per married couple under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act), no transfer tax is due at the federal or state level.
That makes Ohio a friendlier state to die in than Pennsylvania, New York, Massachusetts, Illinois, or any of the other states that still tax estates or inheritances. But it does not make Ohio a free ride. The cost that remains is the probate process: the time, the publicity, the executor commission, the attorney fee, and the court costs.
| What you owe at death in Ohio | 2026 reality |
|---|---|
| Ohio estate tax | $0. Repealed January 1, 2013. |
| Ohio inheritance tax | $0. Ohio has never had one. |
| Federal estate tax | $0 if your estate is below $15M (single) or $30M (married). Permanent under the 2025 federal law. |
| Probate court costs | $200 to $300+ initial deposit, plus publication fees, plus per-filing fees. County-dependent. |
| Executor commission | 4 percent on first $100K, 3 percent on next $300K, 2 percent above $400K (set by Ohio statute). |
| Probate attorney fees | 1.5 to 4 percent of the estate, typically $2,500 to $7,500 for a straightforward case, much more if contested. |
| Time tied up | 6 to 12 months for a clean case. 1 to 2+ years if anything is contested. |
Put it all together: a $1,000,000 estate that runs through Ohio probate typically pays roughly $48,000 in commissions, attorney fees, and court costs, and is locked up for the better part of a year. None of that goes to your family.
Ohio law gives you six clean, statute-backed ways to pass assets to your family without probate court touching them. Most Ohio families need three or four of these. The right combination depends on what you own.
Ohio's signature probate-avoidance move. You sign a notarized affidavit naming who inherits your home (or any Ohio real estate) when you die. You file it with the county recorder. While you are alive, you keep complete control: you can sell, mortgage, change the beneficiary, or revoke it. At death, title passes to the named beneficiary without probate. Authority: Ohio Revised Code 5302.22.
Best for: A primary home, a rental property, a vacation cabin, farmland. Anyone who owns Ohio real estate as a sole owner or tenant in common.
You set up a trust, name yourself as trustee while you are alive, and retitle your assets in the trust's name. At your death, a successor trustee distributes the assets according to your instructions. No probate court. As a bonus in Ohio, trust assets are not subject to the surviving spouse's elective share -- which matters a lot for second marriages and blended families. Authority: Ohio Trust Code, Chapters 5801 through 5811.
Best for: Multiple properties, business interests, blended families, families that want incapacity coverage (the successor trustee can also act if you become unable to manage assets), or anyone with an estate large enough to need multi-generation planning.
Your 401(k), IRA, 403(b), and life insurance policy each ask you to name a beneficiary. That beneficiary inherits the account directly, by contract, without probate. This is the easiest probate-avoidance move on the list -- and the most commonly broken. Failure mode: naming "my estate" as the beneficiary, or leaving the beneficiary blank. Both pull the asset back into probate and can accelerate the income tax bill on retirement accounts.
Best for: Every Ohio resident with a retirement account or life insurance. Review every beneficiary form every five years and after every major life event.
On a savings account, checking account, or CD, you can add a "POD" designation that names who inherits the balance. On a brokerage account holding stocks and bonds, you can register the account in "TOD" form to do the same. You keep complete control during your lifetime. The beneficiary deals directly with the bank or broker after your death. Authority: ORC 2131.10 (POD bank accounts); Ohio's Uniform Transfer-on-Death Security Registration Act, Chapter 1709 (TOD brokerage).
Best for: Every Ohio bank account and every Ohio brokerage account. Setup cost: zero. Filed directly with the institution.
Ohio lets you name a transfer-on-death beneficiary for any vehicle, watercraft, or outboard motor you own as a sole owner. You file BMV Form 3811 (notarized) with your County Clerk of Courts Title Office. At your death, the beneficiary applies for a new title with the death certificate. Separate from this, a surviving spouse can transfer up to $65,000 of vehicle value plus one watercraft and one outboard motor without probate. Authority: ORC 2131.13.
Best for: Cars, trucks, boats, RVs, motorcycles. Especially valuable for collectible vehicles where the value is high.
If a husband and wife (or any two co-owners) take title to Ohio real estate as "survivorship tenants," the surviving owner takes full title at the first death by recording a death certificate plus a short affidavit with the county recorder. No probate. Authority: ORC 5302.17.
Best for: Couples who want both names on the deed and want survivorship to operate by deed. Many Ohio couples combine a survivorship deed (handles the first spouse's death) with a TODDA naming the children (handles the second).
Plus 6 to 12 months of court administration. Estate is public record.
Assets transfer in weeks, not months. Private. Family keeps the $48,000.
Numbers are illustrative based on Ohio's statutory executor schedule (ORC 2113.35) and typical local-rule attorney fee benchmarks. Your actual numbers depend on county, asset mix, and complexity. This is not legal or tax advice.
This is a probate-avoidance guide, not a full estate plan. Several Ohio-specific issues sit alongside probate and need separate attention:
Our Enrolled Agents and advisors can review your current titling, beneficiary forms, and estate documents -- and tell you exactly which of the six tools above (and which combination) keeps the most of your estate with your family. Book a no-cost discovery call.
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