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Estate Planning & Administration in Memphis

By Find Local Law Editorial Team · Last reviewed: May 26, 2026

Researched and drafted with AI assistance and verified against primary sources (statutes, Judicial Council forms, and official court websites). This is general information, not legal advice.

Estate planning in Memphis happens privately — your will, trusts, power of attorney, and advance directives are prepared and signed without any court involvement while you are alive. A court only enters the picture later: if probate is needed to administer the estate, it is heard in the Shelby County Probate Court, a dedicated probate court in the 30th Judicial District.

Where probate would later be filed is a local question; the substantive law lives in our statewide guides. Start with the Tennessee estate planning hub, then review wills, living trusts, power of attorney, or avoiding probate.

Good planning now spares your family later. To get matched with a local Memphis estate planning attorney, connect with a lawyer.

If probate is needed

Court: Estate planning documents are private, but if probate is later needed for a Memphis estate it is heard in the Shelby County Probate Court in the 30th Judicial District.

Estate planning itself — wills, trusts, powers of attorney, and advance directives — is done privately and does not involve a court while you are alive. If probate later becomes necessary, a Memphis estate is administered in the Shelby County Probate Court, a dedicated probate court in the 30th Judicial District. Verify the current court division, location, and procedures on its official website before you file.

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Frequently asked questions

Does estate planning require going to court in Memphis?
No. Wills, trusts, powers of attorney, and advance directives are private documents prepared without court involvement. A court only becomes involved later, in probate, if it is needed to administer the estate.
If probate is needed, which Memphis court handles it?
Probate for a Memphis estate is handled in the Shelby County Probate Court, a dedicated probate court in the 30th Judicial District. Good planning can reduce or simplify probate.

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