Updated: April 2025 | bremo.io financial guides
Being an Executor in Canada: Your Responsibilities
Being named an executor is an honour — it means someone trusts you completely with the settlement of their life's work. But it's also a substantial legal and administrative responsibility that can take months or even years. Before you accept, and once you do, it's important to understand exactly what the role entails.
Key fact: An executor in Canada (called a liquidator in Quebec) has legal duties and can be held personally liable for errors made in administering the estate. You can decline the role, hire professional help, or apply to the court to be relieved of duties if problems arise.
What Is an Executor?
The executor is the person named in a will to carry out its instructions. Your duties begin at the moment of death and continue until the estate is fully settled, which is typically 12 to 24 months for a straightforward estate, and sometimes longer for complex ones.
Can You Decline to Be an Executor?
Yes. You can renounce the role, though it's better to do so before taking any actions that imply you've accepted. If you're unsure, speak with an estate lawyer before taking any steps. You can also act as executor and retain a professional (lawyer, accountant, trust company) to do much of the actual work — paying them from the estate.
Executor Compensation
Executors are entitled to compensation, paid from the estate. The standard is approximately 2.5-5% of the gross value of the estate assets, plus a smaller percentage (often 2/5 of 1%) for investment management. Courts can review and adjust compensation. If you're both executor and a major beneficiary, you may choose to waive compensation (it's taxable income to you) in favour of a larger inheritance.
Step-by-Step: Administering a Canadian Estate
Immediately After Death
- Obtain the death certificate (your funeral home or the provincial vital statistics office).
- Locate and secure the original will.
- Identify and secure all assets — property, vehicles, bank accounts.
- Notify immediate family and beneficiaries.
- Contact life insurance companies to begin the claims process.
- Cancel credit cards, subscriptions, and direct debits.
- Redirect mail to your address as executor.
Within the First Month
- Notify Service Canada to stop CPP and OAS payments (overpayments must be repaid).
- Notify the CRA of the death.
- Open an estate bank account to receive and disburse estate funds.
- Begin compiling a list of all assets and debts.
- Determine whether probate is required and begin the application if so.
Applying for Probate
Probate is the court process that validates the will and grants you legal authority (a Certificate of Appointment of Estate Trustee in Ontario, Probate Grant in BC, etc.) to act on behalf of the estate. Most financial institutions and land registries require probate before releasing assets. The process typically takes 2-6 months depending on the province and court backlogs. Probate fees are calculated on the estate value — in Ontario, approximately 1.5% of assets over $50,000.
Notifying Creditors
You must notify creditors and give them time to make claims before distributing the estate. Posting a notice of death in a local newspaper is standard practice and provides legal protection to the executor. Wait at least 30 days after public notice before distributing. You are personally liable if you distribute assets and there are unpaid debts.
Filing Tax Returns
This is one of the most complex parts of estate administration. As executor you must file:
- The final T1 return (January 1 to date of death) for the year of death. Deadline: April 30 of the following year, or six months after death if death occurred between November 1 and December 31.
- Optional separate returns: In some cases, you can file separate returns for rights and things, business income, or partnership income — each gets basic personal credits, potentially reducing the overall tax bill significantly.
- T3 Trust return: Required for the estate itself if it earns income while being settled. Required annually until the estate is closed.
Obtain a Clearance Certificate from the CRA before making final distributions. Without it, you could be personally responsible for unpaid taxes.
Distributing the Estate
Once probate is granted, debts are paid, and taxes are cleared:
- Distribute specific gifts named in the will.
- Transfer real estate, investments, and other assets to beneficiaries.
- Provide a final accounting to all beneficiaries showing all receipts, disbursements, and the executor's compensation.
- Get signed releases from beneficiaries before final distribution.
- Close the estate bank account.
Common Executor Mistakes
- Distributing before taxes are cleared: The CRA can claw back funds from beneficiaries — and hold you personally responsible.
- Not advertising for creditors: Skipping this step removes your protection against unknown claims.
- Mixing estate funds with personal funds: Always use a separate estate account.
- Delaying too long: Beneficiaries can apply to the court to remove an executor who unreasonably delays.
- Acting without probate when it's required: Financial institutions will refuse transactions without a probate certificate.
When to Hire Professional Help
For complex estates, hiring professionals is almost always worth it:
- Estate lawyer: Essential for probate, contested wills, or complex asset structures.
- Accountant: Valuable for the final return, T3, and tax planning around registered accounts.
- Trust company: Can take over as professional executor, or co-executor, for a fee from the estate.
All professional fees are paid from the estate, not out of your own pocket. Don't hesitate to get help.
Family Disputes and Contentious Estates
Family disputes during estate administration are common and stressful. As executor, you have a duty to all beneficiaries equally — even if you're family yourself. Disputes can arise over:
- The validity of the will itself
- Whether the deceased had mental capacity when signing
- Undue influence by another person
- Interpretation of ambiguous will clauses
- Alleged preferential treatment of one beneficiary over others
If a dispute seems likely, retain an estate litigation lawyer early. The sooner you get professional guidance, the lower the overall legal costs tend to be.
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