What to Do When Someone Dies in Vermont

A complete guide to the legal requirements, deadlines, and practical steps for families in Vermont.

The First 48 Hours

The hours after a death are overwhelming. Here is what needs to happen right away in Vermont:

Death Certificates in Vermont

You will need certified copies of the death certificate for almost every step of the estate process — banks, insurance companies, government agencies, and the DMV each require their own original.

How many to order

Order 15 to 20 certified copies. This sounds excessive, but you will go through them faster than you expect. Ordering more later means additional delays and fees.

Where to order

In Vermont, death certificates are issued by the Vermont Department of Health, Vital Records. Your funeral home will typically file the initial paperwork and can order copies on your behalf.

Cost and timing

Certified copies cost $10 per certified copy in Vermont. Processing typically takes 1-2 weeks. Many processes cannot start until you have certificates in hand, so order early.

Who needs a certified copy:Banks and financial institutions, life insurance companies, the Social Security Administration, the probate court, the DMV, employers, pension administrators, and any institution holding assets in the deceased's name.

Probate in Vermont

Filing deadline

Check with your county probate court for local deadlines

Small estate option

If the estate is valued under $45,000 in personal property, Vermont allows a simplified process: Small Estate Affidavit or simplified probate for estates under $45,000. This can bypass full probate entirely, saving months of time and thousands in legal fees.

Average duration

Full probate in Vermont typically takes 6-12 months. Simplified proceedings are often completed in weeks rather than months.

Key Deadlines in Vermont

Missing a deadline can create legal liability or cause you to lose benefits. Here are the critical windows to be aware of:

Will filing deadlineVaries — check with county probate court
Probate petition deadlineCheck with your county probate court for local deadlines
Creditor claim period3-6 months from notice to creditors (varies)
Final tax return deadlineApril 15 of the year following death
Life insurance claimsNo legal deadline, but file promptly
COBRA health insurance election60 days from qualifying event
Social Security notificationAs soon as possible

What Most Families in VermontDon't Know

If the estate is under $45,000 in personal property, Vermont may allow a simplified process to avoid full probate.

Vermont follows common law property rules — the surviving spouse's share depends on the will or intestacy law.

Vermont does not currently allow Transfer-on-Death deeds — a trust or probate is needed to transfer real property.

Executor Compensation in Vermont

Reasonable compensation as determined by the court. Many people don't realize that serving as executor is compensable work. If you've been named as executor, you are entitled to fair pay for the significant time and responsibility involved.

The mistakes that cost families the most

Missing employer life insurance

Many employers provide 1–2x salary as group life insurance. Families never claim it because they didn't know it existed.

Potential savings$50,000–$200,000

Missing the small estate option

Vermont allows a simplified process for estates under $45,000. Most families don't know this exists and hire attorneys they don't need.

Potential savings$2,000–$5,000

Overpaying for a funeral

The same service can cost $3,000 at one home and $8,000 at another. The FTC requires funeral homes to share prices over the phone.

Potential savings$3,000–$5,000

Afterlight costs $149. One prevented mistake pays for it 10x over.

Every family's situation is different

Your relationship to the person who passed, whether there's a will, whether there's property — these all change which steps apply to you and in what order.

Answer a few quick questions and get a free personalized expert briefing tailored to your exact situation in Vermont.

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This guide provides general information about estate settlement in Vermont and is not legal advice. Laws change, and every situation is unique. For the most current requirements, consult with a local probate attorney or your county probate court. Some details in this guide use general estimates — verify specific costs and deadlines with your local authorities.