Last updated June 27, 2026 · Reviewed by Neil Alan Milestone, The Florida Bar No. 309966
Probate in Marion County is handled by Florida’s Fifth Judicial Circuit, through the Marion County Clerk of the Circuit Court’s probate division in Ocala. As in every Florida county, cases are filed electronically through the statewide Florida Courts E-Filing Portal. This is general information about Florida law, not legal advice.
Where Marion County probate is filed
Marion County sits in the Fifth Judicial Circuit. Probate matters are filed with the Marion County Clerk of the Circuit Court (probate division), with the courthouse in Ocala. Florida uses a single statewide e-filing system — the Florida Courts E-Filing Portal at myflcourtaccess.com — so documents are submitted online. Confirm the current filing address, division, and any local administrative requirements directly with the Marion Clerk.
Which probate path will the estate take?
Florida has more than one path — formal administration, summary administration (for smaller or older estates), and disposition without administration (for very small estates). See summary vs. formal administration, or use the free probate checker to estimate which path a Marion County estate is likely to follow.
What Marion County probate costs
Florida probate cost is largely statewide: attorney fees are presumed reasonable on a statutory schedule that scales with the estate (§733.6171), the personal representative may take a commission (§733.617), and court filing fees are set by §28.241 (roughly $400 for formal administration and about $235 for summary administration), plus publication and certified-copy costs. Estimate a specific estate with the Florida probate cost calculator.
Key deadlines
In formal administration, the personal representative publishes a notice to creditors; most claims must then be filed within the later of three months after first publication or 30 days after service (§733.702), with a two-year absolute bar from the date of death (§733.710). These run the same in Marion County as elsewhere in Florida.
More Florida probate guidance
- Florida probate, explained →
- How much probate costs in Florida →
- How to avoid probate in Florida →
- Probate in other Florida counties →
General information about Florida law, not legal advice. Court locations, fees, and local procedures change — confirm with the Marion Clerk of the Circuit Court and a licensed Florida attorney. EstateDraftFL is software, not a law firm.
Frequently asked questions
- Where do I file probate in Marion County, Florida?
- Marion County probate is handled by the Fifth Judicial Circuit, through the Marion County Clerk of the Circuit Court's probate division in Ocala. Like all Florida counties, filings are submitted electronically through the statewide Florida Courts E-Filing Portal. Confirm the current filing location and any local requirements with the Marion Clerk.
- Do I need probate in Marion County?
- It depends on how the assets are titled. Assets in the deceased's sole name (no beneficiary, joint owner, or trust) generally require probate; assets that pass by beneficiary designation, survivorship, or a funded trust may not. Smaller or older Marion County estates may qualify for summary administration.
- How much does probate cost in Marion County?
- Florida sets attorney fees and the personal-representative commission by statute (§733.6171 and §733.617), scaling with the estate, plus court filing fees set by §28.241 (roughly $400 for formal administration and about $235 for summary administration) and publication costs. The same schedule applies statewide, including Marion County.
- How long does Marion County probate take?
- Summary administration can take a few weeks to a couple of months; formal administration commonly runs several months to a year, largely because of the creditor-claim period. Timelines vary by estate and the court's docket in Ocala.
General information about Florida law, not legal advice.