Search Norfolk Probate Court Records

Norfolk probate court records are kept by the Circuit Court Clerk on Saint Paul's Boulevard. The clerk's office handles wills, qualifications, and estate paperwork for one of Virginia's largest port cities. You can search Norfolk probate court records in person, by phone, or by mail. The Probate Office helps walk in people start a new case file, get an executor named, and pull copies of older wills. Most of these probate court records are open to the public once the case is filed and indexed by the clerk.

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Norfolk Overview

245K Population
Circuit Court Type
10¢/$100 Probate Tax
Yes Independent City

Norfolk Circuit Court Clerk Office

The Norfolk Circuit Court Clerk handles all Norfolk probate court records. The address is 150 Saint Paul's Boulevard, Norfolk, VA 23510. Phone: (757) 664-4380. The clerk takes wills for safekeeping before death, probates wills after death, and qualifies executors and administrators. The office also handles small estate affidavits and guardianship of minors. You can find more on the Norfolk Circuit Court page.

Appointments are required for new probate filings in Norfolk. Call ahead and the clerk will help you set up a time. Walk in service is not the norm for new cases. Staff cannot give legal advice. They can answer general questions about forms, fees, and what to bring.

Norfolk is part of the 4th Judicial Circuit of Virginia. The Circuit Court has wide power over felony cases, civil disputes, family matters, and probate court records. The clerk uses standard fiduciary forms set by the Supreme Court of Virginia.

Virginia Judicial System probate court records portal Norfolk

The Virginia Judicial System portal links Norfolk users to statewide forms and self help pages. View the source at the Virginia probate forms page.

Norfolk and Independent City Status

Virginia is one of only a few states where cities are fully independent of any county. Norfolk is one of 38 independent cities in the state. Each independent city has its own Circuit Court for probate matters. Norfolk filings do not pass through any county clerk. The Norfolk clerk holds will books and fiduciary records for everyone who lived in city lines at death.

Under Virginia Code Section 64.2-443, probate must take place in the city or county where the person lived at death. So if a person lived in Norfolk, you file the will at the Norfolk Circuit Court, not at any nearby county.

How to Search Norfolk Probate Records

You can search Norfolk probate court records in person at the clerk's office, by phone at (757) 664-4380, or by mail. Walking in is the most direct option. Bring a photo ID and the full name of the person who died. Plain copies cost less. Certified copies carry the seal of the court and are needed for things like real estate transfers and life insurance claims.

If you cannot visit, call the clerk to ask about a case. You may also send a written request with the name, year of death, and a check for copy fees. A self-addressed stamped envelope helps the clerk send your records back faster.

For older Norfolk probate court records, check the Library of Virginia chancery records collection and the FamilySearch Virginia probate wiki. Both have indexes that point to will books and fiduciary records for Norfolk.

  • Full name of the person who died
  • Year of death
  • Case number when known
  • Type of record needed
  • Photo ID for in-person searches

Note: Norfolk older probate court records may need a special pull from storage, so call the clerk before you mail in a request.

Probating a Will in Norfolk

To probate a will in Norfolk, the clerk needs the original will, a certified death certificate, a list of heirs at law, and the value of the estate. Bring all these to your appointment. Copies of wills cannot be probated under Virginia law.

You can fill out the Probate Information Form (CC-1650) ahead of time from the Virginia Judicial System self-help portal. Fees are due at the appointment. The full set of fiduciary forms is at the Virginia Courts fiduciary forms page.

If the will is self-proving, the witnesses do not need to come with you. If the will is not self-proving, the witnesses must testify in writing or in person to prove the signatures.

Norfolk Commissioner of Accounts

After you qualify as executor or administrator in Norfolk, you work with the Commissioner of Accounts. The Commissioner is a local lawyer named by the Circuit Court to review estate filings. You file an inventory within four months of qualification. Yearly accountings come after that.

Under Virginia Code Section 64.2-502, the inventory must list all the personal property the estate owns, real estate that the executor controls, and joint or pay on death accounts. The Commissioner reviews each filing for math errors and missing assets.

The Virginia Bar Association guide to estates walks through each step. The Virginia State Bar probate page explains the role of the Commissioner of Accounts in plain words.

Note: Inventories are due within four months of qualification, so set a reminder right after you finish at the clerk's office in Norfolk.

Norfolk Probate Tax and Fees

Virginia charges a state probate tax of 10 cents per $100 of estate value. Norfolk also charges a small local probate tax. Recording fees apply to wills and other documents the clerk files. Typical rates run $18 for the first 10 pages and $32 for 11 to 30 pages.

The Virginia Department of Taxation handles state tax filing rules for estates. You may also need to file federal estate tax forms with the IRS if the gross estate is over the federal limit.

Under Virginia Code Section 64.2-528, the order of debt payment from an estate is set by law. Costs of administration are first. Funeral costs up to $4,000 are next. Federal debts and taxes follow.

Legal Help in Norfolk

The Norfolk and Portsmouth Bar Association can help match you with a probate attorney. The Virginia State Bar runs a statewide referral line at 1-800-552-7977. Both can find a lawyer who works on wills, trusts, and estate cases.

Under Virginia Code Section 64.2-200, the rules of intestate succession set who gets what when there is no will. A spouse, children, parents, or siblings may take a share based on family ties.

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Cities Near Norfolk

Several Virginia independent cities sit next to Norfolk. Each has its own Circuit Court for probate filings.