If a family member died with assets in Sacramento County, those assets generally move through the Sacramento County Superior Court Probate Division before the heirs can receive them. This page walks through how that process works in Sacramento specifically. Where to file, how long the wait typically runs, what California statutory fees cost, and the realistic options for accessing inheritance cash before probate closes.
The Sacramento County Superior Court Probate Division
Decedent's estate probate cases in Sacramento County are heard by the Sacramento County Superior Court Probate Division. The probate department is housed at the Gordon D. Schaber Sacramento County Courthouse at 720 9th Street, Sacramento, CA 95814 (often referred to simply as the "downtown courthouse"). Probate matters are heard in Departments 129 and 17A.
Sacramento Superior Court has full e-filing for probate matters, which has significantly reduced the friction of filing and amending petitions compared to the pre-pandemic paper process. For current courthouse hours, filing windows, the e-filing portal, and the most up-to-date probate calendar, the Court's official information lives at saccourt.ca.gov. The Court's Self-Help Center has plain-language guides for self-represented heirs and personal representatives.
How Long Probate Takes in Sacramento
California probate has a statutory expectation set by California Probate Code section 12200. The personal representative is required to close the estate within one year of issuance of Letters (or 18 months if a federal estate tax return is required), or file a status report under section 12201 explaining the delay.
Typical Sacramento probate timeline by case type:
- Simple estate, no real property, responsive personal representative. 9 to 12 months from Petition for Probate to Order for Final Distribution.
- Estate with real property, no contested issues. 12 to 18 months. The additional time is driven mostly by the court-confirmed sale process under California Probate Code section 10300 and related sections when a personal representative does not have full IAEA authority.
- Estate with multiple heirs, contested distribution, or will contest. 18 to 30 plus months.
- Estate with a 706 federal estate tax return. 15 to 24 months, with the longer window built into Probate Code section 12200 for tax cases.
Sacramento's probate calendar is less congested than LA County's, but Departments 129 and 17A still set hearings 6 to 10 weeks out for an initial Petition for Probate, so calendar density does affect the front end of the timeline. The four-month creditor claim window under section 9100 still applies on every California probate, Sacramento included.
Statutory Probate Costs in California
California is one of a small number of states that fixes probate attorney and executor fees by statute. Both the attorney for the personal representative and the personal representative themselves are entitled to a fee under the same graduated schedule, set out in California Probate Code section 10810 (attorney) and section 10800 (executor):
- 4 percent of the first $100,000 of the estate's gross value
- 3 percent of the next $100,000
- 2 percent of the next $800,000
- 1 percent of the next $9 million
- 0.5 percent of the next $15 million
- Above $25 million, the court sets a reasonable fee on petition
The attorney and executor each receive this schedule independently. For a $500,000 Sacramento estate, the combined statutory fees are $26,000. For a $750,000 estate, $36,000. Extraordinary fees (will contests, complex tax filings, real-property sales) are additional and require a separate court order under section 10811. The court filing fee for a new Petition for Probate in Sacramento Superior Court is currently $435 plus applicable surcharges.
Small-Estate Alternatives in California
Not every Sacramento decedent's estate has to go through full probate. California has three simplified alternatives that can move much faster when the dollar thresholds permit:
- Small estate affidavit (section 13100). For personal property worth up to $208,850. No court case required. The successor signs an affidavit 40 days after the death.
- Petition to Determine Succession to Real Property (sections 13150-13152). For the decedent's primary California residence with a gross value up to $750,000 under the AB 2016 threshold effective April 1, 2025.
- Spousal or Domestic Partner Property Petition (section 13500). For property passing to a surviving spouse or registered domestic partner, with no dollar limit.
For a fuller walkthrough of when each alternative applies, see our guide to transferring property after a death in California.
Where Probate Advances Fit In
For heirs whose share of a Sacramento estate runs through full probate, the practical question is how to manage the 9 to 18 plus month wait between the petition filing and the eventual final distribution. Mortgages, rent, medical bills, and ordinary cost-of-living expenses do not pause while probate runs.
A probate advance is the financial product designed for that gap. A probate-advance company purchases a portion of the heir's expected inheritance share at a discount, paid as a lump sum now, and is repaid directly from the estate when probate distributes. It is not a loan. There are no monthly payments, no credit check, and the heir is not personally liable if the estate distributes less than expected (non-recourse).
The Sacramento Probate-Advance Market
Sacramento is one of the more active California counties for probate-advance funding outside the LA basin. CSF's analysis of California Superior Court probate filings between January 2024 and May 2026 identifies 46 Sacramento County probate cases in which a tracked probate-advance company was named as a funding party on the docket. The per-funder breakdown:
| Funder | Sacramento Cases | Share |
|---|---|---|
| Probate Advance, LLC | 29 | 63% |
| Inheritance Funding Company | 20 | 43% |
| ProbateCash | 10 | 22% |
| Advance Inheritance | 4 | 9% |
Source: CSF analysis of California Superior Court probate filings between January 2024 and May 2026. Includes every Sacramento County probate case in which a tracked probate-advance company was named as a party on the docket. Shares exceed 100 percent because 15 cases (33 percent) had more than one funder named.
The notable Sacramento data point is the 33 percent multi-funder rate (15 of 46 cases involved more than one funder), versus the statewide average of 19 percent. This usually means an heir took an initial advance from one funder, then took a second advance (often from a different funder) months later as the case dragged on. Multi-funder cases generally close more slowly because each subsequent assignment requires additional notice to the personal representative.
CSF for Sacramento Probate Advances
Catalina Structured Funding is a California-headquartered direct funder based in La Crescenta, just north of Los Angeles. The company has been funding future-payment purchases (structured settlements, lottery winnings, annuities) since 2010 and applies the same in-house attorney team and court-filing infrastructure to its probate-advance work.
For Sacramento heirs, three things tend to matter most:
- Same-day funding capability. CSF can fund as quickly as the same day the heir requests an advance, provided the basic case information is in hand at intake.
- Lower minimum. CSF advances $3,000 to $250,000. The $3,000 published minimum is lower than the $5,000 minimum typical at the larger competitors, useful for smaller-share heirs.
- Right-sizing to avoid the multi-funder trap. Given Sacramento's 33 percent multi-funder rate, getting the advance amount right the first time matters more here than in counties with lower repeat-advance activity. CSF's underwriting team will project the case timeline against the advance amount and flag cases where a single larger advance is more cost-effective than serial smaller ones.
CSF has four licensed attorneys on staff who handle compliance with California Probate Code section 11604.5 and the related assignment-of-rights statutes directly. To get a written quote on a Sacramento inheritance, you need the decedent's name, the case number if known, and your relationship to the decedent. Everything else CSF can pull from the public docket. Call (800) 317-3769 or fill out the form on the probate advances overview page.
Frequently Asked Questions
Where do I file a probate case in Sacramento County?
How long does probate take in Sacramento?
How much does probate cost in Sacramento?
How many probate-advance cases happen in Sacramento County?
Can I get money from my inheritance before Sacramento probate closes?
Why do so many Sacramento probate cases have more than one funder on them?
How quickly can I get a Sacramento probate advance funded?
Do I need good credit for a Sacramento probate advance?
Are probate advances legal in California?
Related California Probate Resources
- California probate advances overview. The statewide page.
- Los Angeles probate court guide. LA County (52 percent of CA competitor probate-advance activity).
- Orange County probate court guide. Lamoreaux Justice Center and OC funder market.
- San Bernardino probate court guide. SB Justice Center and Inland Empire funder activity.
- Riverside probate court guide. Riverside Hall of Justice and Coachella Valley coverage.
- California probate timeline guide. The four phases of CA probate.
- California statutory probate fees. The full graduated schedule.
- All probate-advance companies compared. Side-by-side market analysis.