Estate Administration
Estate Liabilities
Also known as: Estate Debts
The debts and expenses owed by a deceased estate, which must be paid out of estate assets before beneficiaries receive anything.
What it means
Estate liabilities are everything the deceased estate owes: mortgages, credit-card balances, personal loans, utility accounts, funeral costs, tax and the expenses of administration. The executor must settle these from estate assets before any estate distribution to beneficiaries. Debts do not simply disappear at death — but they are paid from the estate, not personally by the family, unless someone was a co-borrower or guarantor.
How it's used
Liabilities are paid in a legal order of priority, with funeral and administration expenses typically ranking first. Example: "After the funeral, the mortgage and the ATO were paid, the estate liabilities left just $90,000 for the two beneficiaries to share." If liabilities exceed assets, the estate is an insolvent estate and special rules apply.
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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