Estate Administration
Estate Inventory
Also known as: Inventory of Property
A detailed list of everything a deceased person owned and owed, with values, prepared by the executor or administrator.
What it means
An estate inventory records every asset and liability of the deceased estate — real estate, bank accounts, shares, vehicles, chattels and debts — together with their value at the date of death. It is the foundation of administration: it supports the application for a grant of representation, guides payment of estate liabilities, and tells the executor what is actually available to distribute.
How it's used
Most Supreme Courts require an inventory (often called a "statement of assets and liabilities") to be filed with the grant application. Example: "Preparing the estate inventory revealed an old insurance policy worth $40,000 that the family had completely forgotten about." Accurate valuations matter because they affect capital gains tax and any later family provision claim.
Learn more
Read the guide: Estate Administration →This page is general information about Australian estate-planning terms, not legal advice. See our Legal Disclaimer.
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