Free guide — NB
Executor Guide — New Brunswick
Named as executor in a New Brunswick will? This guide covers your duties, the Letters Probate or Letters of Administration process, probate fee, and the CRA Clearance Certificate (TX19).
General information only — not legal, estate, or tax advice. Executor duties are complex and time-sensitive. Work with a lawyer and an accountant. Verify all figures directly with the Probate Court of New Brunswick (Court of King's Bench, eight districts).
New Brunswick — estate process details
Grant
Letters Probate or Letters of Administration
Probate fee
2026 schedule: estates up to $20,000 = $200; $20,001 to $100,000 = $200 plus $5 per $1,000 over $20,000; over $100,000 = $600 plus $15 per $1,000 over $100,000. — Check official fee notice
Executor compensation
"Fair and reasonable" under the Trustees Act; no fixed percentage.
Passing of accounts
Account to beneficiaries; formal court passing if disputed.
Critical: CRA Clearance Certificate (Form TX19)
You must request a CRA Clearance Certificate using Form TX19 before distributing any estate assets to beneficiaries. Under Income Tax Act s.159(2), distributing without one can make the executor personally liable for any taxes the estate owes. Apply once all tax returns are filed and the CRA is satisfied taxes are paid or secured.
Form TX19 — canada.caExecutor duties timeline
First days and weeks
1–3 months
3–12 months
Wrap-up
Download the New Brunswick executor checklist
All the steps above in a branded PDF checklist, with province-specific court and fee details. Free.
Free. General information only -- not legal or regulatory advice.
Just getting started after the death?
The first administrative steps — Death Certificate, Service Canada, CRA notification, health card cancellation — are covered in the After-a-Death guide.
What to Do When Someone Dies in New Brunswick →Plan ahead: Wills & Power of Attorney
Make sure your own will, property POA, and personal-care directive are in order so your estate is easy to administer. Instrument names and rules differ by province.
Wills & POA Guide — New Brunswick →Common questions — New Brunswick
What is the probate process called in New Brunswick?
How is an executor compensated in New Brunswick?
What is the CRA Clearance Certificate and when do I need it?
What are the first steps as executor in New Brunswick?
Executor guides for other provinces
Guidepost is not a law firm. This guide is for general informational purposes only. Full disclaimer